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The Best Choices You Can Make for a Practically Hassle-Free Yard

Colorful coneflowers in the yard of a home

The house. The yard. It’s all a part of the American dream, right? But after a few seasons with raking, mowing, fertilizing, watering, weeding, pruning, and more, having a yard can feel more like an endless fever dream.

Having a yard doesn’t have to suck up every a moment of your life. The trick is picking plants and landscaping materials that look good without tons of help from you. Here’s what to plant so you can reclaim some time.

Grass

For being everywhere, grass is a lot of work. “It’s high maintenance,” says Abra Lee, a horticulturist and owner of Conquer the Soil. “It needs a lot of mowing, fertilizer, and water. It’s prone to disease.”

Even so, it’s kind of a must for most yards. To make your grass maintenance life easier, go with a patch of grass that’s as small as you can get away with, and plant these types:

Grass for Northern Climates

Grass for Southern Climates

 

Bushes

Pick bushes you don’t need to prune constantly. The time you spend trimming boxwoods into tidy little balls is part of your life you’ll never get back.

Flowers

Perennials are the lazy gardener’s friend. Plant them once, and they’ll come back year after year.

Trees

First, buy the largest young tree you can afford, because a tiny switch of sapling might not become a big tree until you’re eligible for AARP. Second, don’t plant a Bradford pear. Ever. They crack and fall too easily. Instead, plant these:

Groundcover

Plant some instead of grass in places where there’s not much foot traffic. They’ll smother weeds, and they grow just fine with no help from you.

Mulch

Mulch is your friend. Put it around your plants, and it will put the smackdown on weeds, you won’t have to water as often, and it’ll enrich the soil when it decays into the earth. Enriched soil means healthy plants. Healthy plants don’t get sick and die.

Mindset

OK, it’s not a landscaping material, but how you feel about your yard makes a big difference in how you feel about caring for it. Here’s the right approach: It’s your dang yard, so pick the plants and landscaping materials you’ll enjoy spending time with.

“The reason we have a yard is so we can get joy in reconnecting with nature and lose the stress of our everyday lives,” says Patrick Beasley, a landscape architect in Knoxville, Tenn. “Plant things that make you happy, and taking care of them will be a part of your life you enjoy.”

Related: Easy Landscaping Ideas for People Who Hate Yard Work

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