Susan Harris
All about gardening the eco-friendly way, by Susan Harris and 22 other garden writers and experts.

Living Life in Clover

June 6, 2006 · 8 comments

Cloverastilbe_1The old-fashioned idiom to be "in clover" means living a carefree life of ease, comfort and prosperity."  Okay, count me in.  And everyone knows that clover of the four-leaf variety is good luck.

But we’re gardeners here, so what about planting the stuff in our lawns?  Here’s what Less Lawn has to say about it:

"Clover is often planted by gardeners as a soil conditioner. It grows quickly and easily, chokes out weeds and is easily ‘turned in’ to the beds when planting time draws near. The deep root system reduces soil compaction. Clover is also a nitrogen-fixing plant, which   enriches the soil with natural fertilizer.  Clover also works well, however, as a replacement for turf – consider the benefits: 
Low Maintenance  - Clover needs little to no watering or mowing.
No Fertilizers - Chemical fertilizers are not needed to grow clover.
Color - Clover stays green even in the driest part of summer.
Inexpensive  - It costs about $4 to cover 4000 sq. ft. of turf area.
Comfortable  - Easy to walk through or play on, although not as durable as grass."

Did you catch the bit about clover being a "nitrogen-fixing" plant?  Now I’m no botanist, as Readers here have surely noticed, so I looked it up for you and it goes like this.  Bacteria that live in nodules on the roots of clover convert nitrogen in the atmosphere into a form that’s usable by plants.  There, that’s as technical as you’ll ever get from me.  Cool stuff, though.

And if you care about biodiversity (and who doesn’t?), clover also supports more wildlife by providing nectar for those pollinating bees we all love and even attracts small, non-stinging but aphid-eating wasps.

So what’s not to love?  I’ll concede that the romance of running barefoot across fields of flowering clover is sometimes ruined by the screams and curses of the newly bee-stung.  But isn’t that why God created gardening clogs and TEVA sandels?

{ 8 comments }

1 Carol June 6, 2006 at 6:42 pm

I’d love to have a lawn with more clover in it, but I have given in to the neighborhood “peer pressure” and have just grass! Someday, maybe I’ll convince everyone to convert to clover together with me.

2 millionbells June 7, 2006 at 7:07 am

I love my clover filled back yard. I’m trying to transplant some of it into my very thin front yard.

Although, I would object to the notion that it doesn’t need much mowing. Not only does my grass grow faster in amongst the clover, but the clover grows tall too! That’s always the first area that needs mowing. Although, I do let it go a bit longer to put up flowers for the bees and butterflies.

3 Nelumbo June 7, 2006 at 11:47 pm

Interesting idea. In the midwest I’ve seen farmers plant up some clover in their fields between crops, since it adds nitrogen to the soil they can use less fertilizer with the next crop. Pretty cool trick.

4 Alice June 8, 2006 at 6:56 am

Not sure where the writer’s ‘summer’ is, but I’d like to see it stay green through an Australian summer with little or no water.

5 knitagarden June 22, 2006 at 9:01 am

I planted one lb. of white clover seed into my non-lawn in early spring. My honeybees love clover and I definitely like its non-maintenance value. When you are away & can’t mow the lawn, its quite nice to return to a mass of clover flowers & happy bees.

6 Sparow July 14, 2006 at 3:40 pm

Much as I love clover and agree with it as a lawn alternative, it’s also worth mentioning that there are different types of clover. Often, here in the mid-atlantic, Crimson Clover is considered invasive so shouldn’t be planted. I assume that Susan was probably referring to White Dutch clover which is the variety most commonly found in lawns. One thing I have discovered while lounging in patches of clover, however, is that it stains clothing much worse than grass does (and the stains are a lot harder to get out, too!)

7 Becky September 12, 2006 at 1:54 pm

note to self: get that clover growin’

8 Izzy November 16, 2009 at 6:58 pm

I live in Oregon.  I built my house a year ago and still haven't been able to afford to landscape my front yard.  I built my house to save a tree in my front yard, it was quite an ordeal.  It is a 40+ year old willow.  Very mystical and whimsy.  I have four little children who love it.   I have now collected rocks and outlined a path, my bed under the tree and where my front yard begins after that bed and ends at the ditch and then the street.  We have natural storm drains.    
Now I am left with large front to plant grass which I can't afford to water, woudn't want to or get to it if I could honestly…  My gut tells me no grass.  Its irresponsible.   I'm planting Crimson Clover.  It grows fast and cleans the air thats why it becomes nitrogen in the soil when composted right?  Besides, It will add amazing contrast to all the green around us and fix our construction soil and the boring unfinished look of our yard.  What do you think?  Will that help or harm my neighbor who is selling next door or my friend trying to rent their house out next door?  Oh!  I was also thinking that it will help the bees.  I've noticed lots of dead bees in sitting water around my house.  

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