Designing for Low Maintenance
"Low Maintenance" has been a popular phrase in the gardening media for ages now, long enough to create plenty of confusion on the subject. So let's start with the question: What Is Maintenance? The answer depends on the task and the person accomplishing it.
To many nongardeners, all gardening or yard work is considered maintenance and is to be avoided. And when it comes to such duties as applying chemicals, hassling with sprinklers, mowing and blowing, even gardeners want to avoid them. In fact, we think of them as "yardening," not gardening.
Real gardeners generally want to spend time in their gardens tending the plants and dreaming up new design schemes and plant combos. So while we agree with nongardeners in wanting to avoid the drudgework duties (and duties they are), we actually enjoy tasks like pruning, deadheading old blossoms, hand-watering, weeding, and checking on our plants daily - anything to be in the garden. I offer as Exhibit A my dear old gardening mom who, after moving into a townhouse with almost no land to tend, would offer to drive 100 miles to weed my garden - she missed it that much. And I myself have been known to weed the gardens of bed and breakfasts where I'm a guest. So yes, it's an addiction and there's no 12-Step Program for it.
But sometimes even diehard gardeners need low-maintenance gardens, due to physical limitations or too many demands on their time. And we all want to limit garden maintenance to tasks that are creative or relaxing, so these principles of low-maintenance (or more accurately, low-drudgery) garden design are for everyone.
Plants v. Pavement
Clearly the least work of any landscape solution is to pave or deck over your entire property, but if you liked those ideas you wouldn't be reading this site, now would you? So let's assume you enjoy things that grow - plants! - and appreciate their contributions to air and water quality, not to mention your own quality of life. So which plants are the least work? The answer is clearly trees and shrubs, which also offer the most benefits to air and water quality. Smaller plants like perennials and annuals are definitely more work, while bulbs can be easy-care if you select the right ones. Even lawn can be low-maintenance if it's grown organically and if you abandon all hope of perfection (see Earth-Friendly Lawn Care about the Year).
Keep it Simple
Planting in sweeps and masses of just a few plants is a popular recommendation for reducing maintenance - the larger the mass the better. (For large plants, 5 to10; for smaller ones, 10 to 30.) This limited plant palette makes it easier to keep up with their care and prevent their intrusion on neighboring plants. Also, the fewer the species, the easier it is to limit yourself to those that are well suited to your site. And aesthetically, massing of plants usually results in a better looking garden, one that's restful to the eye, not chaotic.
Going Lawnless
The delawning movement is in full swing, but if low maintenance is important to you, think very carefully before joining. For sunny spots the meadow look is often suggested but seen up-close around your home, meadows are unsightly most of the year and much more work than you'd imagine. Woodland gardens with paths meandering through them are more practical and better looking, too. They take advantage of the low-maintenance qualities of trees and shrubs, and have the added benefit of creating shade, which reduces weeds and the need to water. In urban and older suburban areas I often suggest eliminating the small front lawn but keeping some lawn in the back for family fun. See The Great American Delawning Movement for examples of great-looking lawnless yards and suggestions for taking the plunge.
Gorgeous, Easy Borders
Most of us choose to keep some lawn because it can be walked and played on, and it shows the plants arrayed around it to their best advantage. For my money, the best-looking, easiest border is what's called the American Mixed Border, as popularized by Ann Lovejoy in her book by that name and others that followed. The basic design principle in mixed borders is copying nature, especially the way forests transition into meadows. Think about it. In the background are the tallest trees - the forest. In front of them are understory trees like dogwoods. In front of them are the shrubs, then shorter plants and finally, groundcover. And remember, the least-maintenance borders contain only small trees and shrubs.
Low-maintenance border techniques:
Use large curving lines that are easy to mow along. Edge the lawn with a paved mowing strip flush with lawn to eliminate the need to trim after mowing.- Make borders and islands (freestanding plant areas) large, the larger the better.
- Limit those islands and avoid free-standing trees in the middle of your lawn. Trees look better and are generally happier when incorporated into borders. If you have a tree that can't be included in a border, at least remove the sod around it because mowing close to trees is difficult and can damages the tree. Instead, ring the tree with an easy, no-mow groundcover, like liriope or pachysandra, or just mulch.
- Limit high-maintenance plants to one area that's easily reachable by you and your water supply.
- Plant groundcover close together so it will fill in quickly and prevent weeds.
- Include stepping stones or pavers through wide borders, for easy access without causing soil compaction.
More Design Tips for Reducing Work
High-traffic paths should be pavers or stepping stones, set flush with the ground, never lawn.- Containers are popular in the gardening media but qualify as high-maintenance by any account, especially in the sun where they dry out quickly. We're talking daily watering. Plants in containers also require more frequent feeding.
- One or two high-impact plants in prominent sites can dramatize an otherwise simple garden using a very limited palette of plants.
- Avoid ponds like the plague. Go ahead and try an easy plug-in water fountain, but ponds are a lot of work and don't believe any pond salesman who tells you they're not. You've been warned.
Originally published in Maryland's Voice Newspapers. If you have comments about the article, send 'em along.
For More Information in Print
- Ann Lovejoy's Organic Garden Design School
- by my favorite organic designer.
- A Year Along the Garden Path
by Ann Lovejoy - The American Mixed Border
by Ann Lovejoy
- Naturalistic Gardening
by Ann Lovejoy - Color Encyclopedia of Ornamental Grasses
by Darke - American Woodland Garden
by Darke - Organic Lawn Care
by Paul Tukey, spokesman for the important SafeLawns campaign. - The Secret Life of Compost
by Malcolm Beck was recommended to me by a serious composter. - Rodale's Weekend Gardener
- Rodale's Low-Maintenance Gardening
is great and only $2.70 used on Amazon. Excellent overall how-to-garden book for lower maintenance and eco-friendliness. - The Rodale Book of Composting
- they've been doing it for decades. - Rodale's All-New Encyclopedia of Organic Gardening

- The Truth about Garden Remedies
by Jeff Gillman - Organic Gardening Magazine
- another trusted source for decades. 
- The Well Tended Perennial Garden
by Tracy DiSabato-Aust explains how to get better appearance from perennials. They really do need tending to.
Not recommended: Beyond the Lawn, or any "low-maintenance gardening" book that include sweeping endorsements of lawn replacement or, as this book does, ponds!




