
The foundation of a healthy Gainesville lawn is healthy soil. This is the mantra of many landscape architects. An organic garden relies heavily on compost, because it’s the best method of returning decomposed organic matter back to the soil. Compost tea, manure tea or broken-down compost from your yard waste bin will work magic on your plants.
Other ways to help create a healthy soil ecosystem include the use of organic fertilizer, like fish emulsion and adding mycorrhizal fungi to your soil. The fungi benefit plants by helping them to absorb more nutrients. It’s a natural process that you can foster in your own soil to help your garden thrive.

Clover is very easy to maintain and looks graceful as a naturalized clump at the edge of a lawn or planting bed. Adding a “living fertilizer” like clover contributes to a healthy soil that is rich with nutrients.

This is the obvious first place to consider reducing chemical applications. Lawns make up a large percentage of American homeowners’ landscapes. I love lounging on a lush lawn, and it’s a great surface for kids and pets to run around on. This imageshows a traditional lawn that is maintained using ecofriendly methods.

One way to evaluate if your lawn and the soil below are acting as a healthy ecosystem is by looking at the amount of thatch collected under the grass blades. Thatch is the dead, brown grass blades that are meant to break down into the soil. There should be some thatch in your lawn, but not a buildup of more than 2 inches. A buildup means that your grass is not properly breaking down into the soil. Establish a healthy soil ecosystem and the thatch will begin to break down into the soil to feed your lawn.


You also have the option of completely reworking your lawn into a short-grass meadow of sedges (theCarex genus of grasses). Carex grasses that are native to your region can be densely planted and allowed to grow long to provide a very nice natural look. This type of alternative lawn has been growing in popularity as more gardeners are discovering the beauty of long grasses.


Do you regularly have a shrub that is diseased or a host to pests? One of the easiest ways to get a pest-free Gainesville landscape is by using natives. Natives do not come under attack like the nonnative, ornamental varieties. You can add native plants yourself or do a major overhaul by working with a designer who specializes in native plantings. You can search Houzz tofind landscape designers in your area.
The same principles for building healthy soil apply to trees and shrubs. Be sure to collect your leaves and clippings to add to the compost pile. Adding the dead organic matter to your pile, letting it decompose and then adding it back to your soil is a way to mimic the decay-growth cycle of nature.

Weeds are such a nuisance to the Gainesville gardener. Eradication of weeds can be a constant battle. The key is to be one step ahead of those pesky plants that sprout up in the most undesirable places. If you use a maintenance company, ask that the weeds be hand pulled or removed with hand tools so they are fully dug up.
5 Ways to Naturally Win the Weed War

If you live in the Southeast, you are familiar with invasive fire ants, which thrive in full sun in nutrient-poor “disturbed” soils. Their mounds may dot your yard, and are commonly found at the edges near a street curb or driveway. Ridding your landscape of fire ants is possible, but it will take a long time, and the methods are specific to each pest. This is true for any aggressive critter.
There are many, many beneficial garden insects, too. Learn to differentiate between the good and bad. An influx of a pest is typically a sign of an imbalance in your Gainesville landscape.Solve the imbalance organically and you may have fewer issues over time as your landscape becomes healthier.

Talk with your landscape maintenance company about switching to an organic plan. The lawn-mowing, weed-removing business is very competitive, and your hired company will want to keep you as a client. Communicate that you want to transition to an organic plan. If your current company is unable to provide organic service, find somebody else. Search for Houzz landscape contractor professionals using phrases like “organic lawn,” “ecolandscaping” and “sustainable landscape maintenance.”
