• Planting Clover

    From ~rdh@rdh@tilde.institute to tilde.institute on Tue May 19 05:59:06 2026
    One thing that really bunches my drawers is having to mow the lawn.
    I feel like a peasant toiling away for hours in the heat, but when
    I'm done, I don't even have any food to show for it, and can't use
    the fruits of my labor to pay off the local lord. It's the bane of
    my existence and sends me into a suicidal rage once a week for half
    the year.

    So back in 2024 I decided to kill off a portion of my lawn and
    replace it with clover. That year we ended up not having a real
    spring, so I couldn't plant. Same in 2025. Temps went from freezing
    to boiling overnight. But this year things were different.

    A week and a half ago I pulled up the tattered remains of the tarp
    covering my test patch and planted clover. Today, they finally
    sprouted. <3 I'm very excited to see how it turns out!

    Anyone here had any experience with clover lawns?

    ~rdh
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  • From Ben Collver@bencollver@tilde.pink to tilde.institute on Sun May 24 22:50:58 2026
    On 2026-05-19, ~rdh <rdh@tilde.institute> wrote:
    Anyone here had any experience with clover lawns?

    ~rdh

    Yes, they are pleasant to lay down in and read a book.
    They can't compete with grasses, so they need to be
    maintained or else other stuff will take over.

    There's an aggressive weed here called Burr Medic that
    seems to be able to compete with grass. It's in the
    clover family and is edible. Wikipedia says that it's
    eaten as a green in some parts of China and by natives
    in some parts of Mexico. It has yellow flowers and
    another common name is California Burr Clover. But
    the weed gets wiry, not soft and wonderful to lay on
    like a bed of white clover.

    One winter we had an excess of clover seed and used it
    in a sprouting jar. It supplemented our salads all
    winter.

    -Ben
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