I’m gradually swapping my lawn for clovers. More resilient to weather, doesn’t need a lot of water, stops most weeds from growing and make those pretty white-purpleish flowers when blooming.
I know you are joking, but one of the paradoxes of plant care is water. The roots need enough moisture that they can carry water and nutrients to the plant, but too much causes them to suffocate.
I’m gradually swapping my lawn for clovers. More resilient to weather, doesn’t need a lot of water, stops most weeds from growing and make those pretty white-purpleish flowers when blooming.
And I don’t put any chemicals.
Where I live we have dichondra
Make sure you test your water for dihydrogen monoxide contamination. That chemical can ruin gardens.
I know you are joking, but one of the paradoxes of plant care is water. The roots need enough moisture that they can carry water and nutrients to the plant, but too much causes them to suffocate.
That chemical can be very deadly. If enough of it gets into your airway, it can cause asphyxiation.
And a lot of chronic health problems if it gets in your lungs
I heard it’s in everyone’s body already nowadays
Every cancer patient has been exposed to it at some point
Try to use native clover if you can. Otherwise, you’re replacing high-maintenance, non-native with low-maintenance, non-native and possibly invasive.