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#1
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I am purchasing a house with a small back lawn and some side plants. I
really have no interest in, or knowledge of, gardening ![]() I've been considering replacing the existing lawn with a chamomile lawn, rather than paving it over. The only reason I'm suggesting this is because somebody told me it would be a maintenance free lawn. I wont be walking on it much. Is it cheaper to do this rather than to have it paved over. I probably would pay somebody to do it in both instances. Thanks ![]() |
#2
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On Sun, 13 Apr 2003 14:36:01 +0100, "Dave Arthuro" wrote:
I am purchasing a house with a small back lawn and some side plants. I really have no interest in, or knowledge of, gardening ![]() I've been considering replacing the existing lawn with a chamomile lawn, rather than paving it over. The only reason I'm suggesting this is because somebody told me it would be a maintenance free lawn. I wont be walking on it much. Is it cheaper to do this rather than to have it paved over. I probably would pay somebody to do it in both instances. Thanks ![]() Don't know much about camomile lawns, other than when people do have them, they're quite small (the lawn, not the people!) because you need lots of individual plants fairly close together, and I think it works out pretty expensive. I don't think they're that easy to establish or maintain, either. It's not like sowing grass seed and waiting for it to come up, or having turf laid. If it was easy, everyone would do it. The benefits are that they don't need mowing, apparently, and they smell nice. Looking in a back number of 'Gardeners World' magazine (March 2002), an ad says that 50 plants are needed per square meter (that's about 1 plant every 15 cm, or 6 inches, in all directions), costing £12.50. There's also a web site www.camomilelawns.co.uk . If you do try it, the recommended variety of camomile to go for is 'Treneague'. -- Chris E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net |
#3
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"Dave Arthuro" wrote in message
| I've been considering replacing the existing lawn with a chamomile lawn, | rather than paving it over. The only reason I'm suggesting this is because | somebody told me it would be a maintenance free lawn. I wont be | walking on it much. We had a camomile lawn many years ago. The fragrance was amazing but sadly the lawn only survived a couple of weeks because smell spread to every slug within a 5 mile radius. We had a very large resident toad and frogs in the garden & I often went out after dark to remove as many slugs as I could find. This wasn't difficult as there were so many it was hard not to tread on them. I hope you have more success. Pauline |
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