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#lawn
headspace-hotel · 9 months
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What i've been learning thru my research is that Lawn Culture and laws against "weeds" in America are deeply connected to anxieties about "undesirable" people.
I read this essay called "Controlling the Weed Nuisance in Turn-of-the-century American Cities" by Zachary J. S. Falck and it discusses how the late 1800's and early 1900's created ideal habitats for weeds with urban expansion, railroads, the colonization of more territory, and the like.
Around this time, laws requiring the destruction of "weeds" were passed in many American cities. These weedy plants were viewed as "filth" and literally disease-causing—in the 1880's in St. Louis, a newspaper reported that weeds infected school children with typhoid, diphtheria, and scarlet fever.
Weeds were also seen as "conducive to immorality" by promoting the presence of "tramps and idlers." People thought wild growing plants would "shelter" threatening criminals. Weeds were heavily associated with poverty and immortality. Panic about them spiked strongly after malaria and typhoid outbreaks.
To make things even wilder, one of the main weeds the legal turmoil and public anxiety centered upon was actually the sunflower. Milkweed was also a major "undesirable" weed and a major target of laws mandating the destruction of weeds.
The major explosion in weed-control law being put forth and enforced happened around 1905-1910. And I formed a hypothesis—I had this abrupt remembrance of something I studied in a history class in college. I thought to myself, I bet this coincides with a major wave of immigration to the USA.
Bingo. 1907 was the peak of European immigration. We must keep in mind that these people were not "white" in the exact way that is recognized today. From what I remember from my history classes, Eastern European people were very much feared as criminals and potential communists. Wikipedia elaborates that the Immigration Act of 1924 was meant to restrict Jewish, Slavic, and Italian people from entering the country, and that the major wave of immigration among them began in the 1890s. Almost perfectly coinciding with the "weed nuisance" panic. (The Immigration Act of 1917 also banned intellectually disabled people, gay people, anarchists, and people from Asia apart from the Chinese...which were already banned since 1880.)
From this evidence, I would guess that our aesthetics and views about "weeds" emerged from the convergence of two things:
First, we were obliterating native ecosystems by colonizing them and violently displacing their caretakers, then running roughshod over them with poorly informed agricultural and horticultural techniques, as well as constructing lots of cities and railroads, creating the ideal circumstances for weeds.
Second, lots of immigrants were entering the country, and xenophobia and racism lent itself to fears of "criminals" "tramps" and other "undesirable" people, leading to a desire to forcefully impose order and push out the "Other." I am not inventing a connection—undesirable people and undesirable weeds were frequently compared in these times.
And this was at the very beginnings of the eugenics movement, wherein supposedly "inferior" and poor or racialized people were described in a manner much the same as "weeds," particularly supposedly "breeding" much faster than other people.
There is another connection that the essay doesn't bring up, but that is very clear to me. Weeds are in fact plants of the poor and of immigrants, because they are often medicinal and food plants for people on the margins, hanging out around human habitation like semi-domesticated cats around granaries in the ancient Near East.
My Appalachian ancestors ate pokeweed, Phytolacca americana. The plant is toxic, but poor people in the South would gather the plant's young leaves and boil them three times to get the poison out, then eat them as "poke salad." Pokeweed is a weed that grows readily on roadsides and in vacant lots.
In some parts of the world, it is grown as an ornamental plant for its huge, tropical-looking leaves and magenta stems. But my mom hates the stuff. "Cut that down," she says, "it makes us look like rednecks."
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vintagehomecollection · 3 months
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The Garden Book, 1984
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webdiggerxxx · 4 months
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꧁★꧂
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llovinghome · 5 months
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guineapiggies · 28 days
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Via oups_le_chon
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enriquemzn262 · 2 years
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hope-for-the-planet · 2 years
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In a major sustainability win, Las Vegas, Nevada has now outlawed "nonfunctional” grass turf.
Anyone familiar with this topic knows that grass lawns are a sustainability nightmare--they are essentially a monoculture of useless grass that demands huge investments of fertilizer, herbicide, and especially water to maintain.
Laws like this and other water conservation measures have allowed Las Vegas to decrease their per-person water use by around 50%. Hopefully, this law will pave the way for similar measures in other areas experiencing water scarcity. 
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i learned that mowing American lawns uses 800 million gallons of gas every year (x)
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yogadaily · 4 months
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(via Pin on Nail 2023  || Curated with love by yogadaily) 
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claypigeonpottery · 10 months
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carved this one a week ago.
what do you call a baby jackalope?
…this isn’t the start of a joke I’m genuinely asking lol
a baby hare (jackrabbits are hares) is a leveret. a baby antelope is a calf. could also go with fawn I guess, since mine tend towards deer antlers. and baby rabbits are kits or kittens
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ancientstarrydynamo · 5 months
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The mushrooms on my front lawn
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electronicsquid · 3 months
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When you wake up and decide to have coffee on the lawn (Vikki Dougan)
(Nina Leen. 1952)
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vintagehomecollection · 9 months
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Garden act as extension of the countryside. The foreground planting in this damp location is domestic, but it reflects its location for over the mown path wild planting folds naturally into the background of trees, with incidental sculptural elements on the left, such as the fern.
The Garden Book, 1984
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jillraggett · 1 year
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Plant of the Day
Thursday 6 April 2023
Crocus flower from late-winter to early spring, providing a much-needed source of nectar and pollen for queen bumblebees emerging from hibernation. This lawn has a blend of Crocus × cultorum 'Pickwick' (purple-striped flowers with orange stamens and stigma), Crocus x cultorum 'Jeanne D'Arc' (white flowers with a purple stain) and Crocus vernus 'Flower Record' (purple flowers).
Jill Raggett
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thunderstruck9 · 1 year
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John Ziqiang Wu (Chinese, 1983), Home Stay With Kids Due To Covid-19, 2020. Watercolor and acrylic on paper, 10 x 14 in.
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guineapiggies · 20 days
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Via guineavale_tasmania
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