No Mow Gallery

This No Mow Lawn was seeded in fall, and is shown here emerging the following spring.

Fully established No Mow lawn hillside, in upstate New York.

No Mow will thrive in shade as long as the soil is well-drained. Avoid planting No Mow in full shade if the site is consistently damp, or high in clay.

No Mow Lawn in a backyard setting in Door County, Wisconsin.

No Mow will thrive in open sunny areas.

No Mow is well utilized in any area where mowing is necessarily infrequent. No Mow Lawn is a natural choice for low-maintenance borders and hard-to-mow areas. Some common applications are orchards, pathways around meadows & natural areas, ultility corridors or urban roadside & parking medians.

No Mow on a steep slope can be seeded using No Mow with Annual Rye, or an erosion blanket.

No Mow forms a thick green carpet of grass in the yard surrounding this newly built house. The best looking, and characteristic No Mow Lawn, is achieved by mowing twice a year: once in late spring or early summer, and again in the fall.

No Mow as a low maintenance ground cover in a small orchard setting.
First article: About No Mow Lawn
Buy No Mow Lawn