
Staying Off The Grass
One of the ways to break the shackles of that resource-hungry lawn is to replace the grass altogether. This non-lawn front yard from Kneeland Street benefits from its small size. The early-spring pic shows that this is obviously the yard of someone who loves to garden. This is not a plant-it-and-walk-away yard. The lazy gardener would probably be better served with the right selection of sustainable, carefree shrubs.
Eat Your Yard, Continued It seems that a home vegetable garden renaissance is at hand. Home gardening stories are sprouting up all over the web. All the publicity surrounding the push to plant a garden on the White House lawn doesn’t hurt, either. ‘‘It’s a hurricane,’‘ George Ball, owner of W. Atlee... more
A medium-sized garden in the Eden Park section of Cranston In our quest to find ways replace our ubiquitous and resource-hungry lawns, it’s time to consider the front yard vegetable garden. It’s becoming more common to see portions of Cranston lots dedicated to various edibles. A luxurious lot in Eastern Cranston... more
Images from a thoroughly decorated house on Tennyson. Somewhere in the menagerie is an inflatable green M&M. I can see an M&M in a scary light – especially to someone with diabetes. The artist of the display claims it was purely a comic touch.
He was walking [along] a road. He again saw a Rabbit lying on the edge of the road. As he went along quite close to it, he spoke thus: “Who’d meddle with a rock Rabbit?” he said. That one was a real Rabbit but he paid no attention to it. He passed on... more
When they went on the second day and arrived at the garden, it had all grown up high again. Every tree and bush, every stalk and bramble had put itself back together again. “What is happening?” they said. The animals small and great: puma, jaguar, deer, rabbit, fox, coyote, peccary,... more