Oh Lemmy, I saw all the lightning bugs in the trees last night, blinking fast as hell because of the high temperature, and I thought of you!
I was just discussing my raggedy-ass yard and it’s contribution to the local fauna.
Submitted 1 day ago by fossilesque@mander.xyz to science_memes@mander.xyz
https://mander.xyz/pictrs/image/bfa35a73-2d4b-43aa-a6ed-5bd67d2cd9d9.jpeg
Oh Lemmy, I saw all the lightning bugs in the trees last night, blinking fast as hell because of the high temperature, and I thought of you!
I was just discussing my raggedy-ass yard and it’s contribution to the local fauna.
Mine too! My lawn is slowly turning into a sea of clover, I throw wild flower seeds all over the place, and get to see all kinds of cool bugs! Hopefully they enjoy my 8 acres of natural habitat.
Incredibly based thank you for your service o7
Alright I’m going to need all of your suggestions as this is the project I’m working on right now.
A bought a tiny townhouse in Ontario 7 months ago and I have a tiny yard.
The yard had mostly grass, some moss, crab grass, a little bit of clover, and a garden, but there were many dirt patches.
I have spread clover seed in the yard, especially in the dirt patches.
Then I weeded the garden, I have my mother coming over next month to help me pick local garden fauna, and I had to pull a tiny tree out because it was planted right beside the foundation of the building and would eventually cause damage.
Should I be pulling out the crabgrass? My plan was to leave the others. What wildflowers are native to Ontario?
I’d check for native species of clover, which is invasive in most of Canada.
Visit some Garden Centres near you- often they’ll have seed mixes of local perennial flowers available for purchase, you just need to spread the seeds in the spring or autumn.
Also, “weeds” aren’t always weeds, they’re just plants that some people decided get in the way of monocultures. If it’s flowering, it’s feeding insects, so leave it be.
The fireflies are awesome in my area this summer and my humble yard is part of that. It’s honestly so satisfying watching plants come back year after year, bigger and bigger
Given that you are asking in a thread that is the subject of fireflies, we are going to assume you are asking for suggestions to improve firefly accommodations.
In this regard, do not ever clean your yard of any loose leaf vegetation or damp rotting vegetation and it will attract fireflies. Go to nearby privately owned plant nurseries and ask them for native species for your garden.
If you don’t care about insects, and are asking simply to project to us a fake progressive personality, then resume decorating your yard with non-native invasive species from your local commercial/franchise garden center, from what it sounds you are currently doing.
People of Lemmy don’t know what civility means.
Hold some restraint maybe in assuming you know everything.
Man im working so hard to be that yard, but its not as easy as just stop mowing!
Always on the lookout for invasives, poison ivy, tree sapplings (my yard isnt big enough to support any more trees without threatening the house), and other undesirables.
Then theres also the english ivy encroaching from the corner that I’ve pretty much given up on :/
It’s great that you’re helping your native plants stand against the invasives, they’re like the schoolyard bullies of the backyard.
English ivy is a tough one, but at least getting the vertical growth is a fairly easy to manage. the vertical growth is also more problematic because it is a requirement for producing berries and killing trees
It’s great that you’re helping your native plants stand against the invasives, they’re like the schoolyard bullies of the backyard.
You can do a hell of a lot with a meter squared
i’d never heard fireflies called lightning bugs before
Lightning bug, eh? I smell a Pennsylvania native
They’re called that in a lot of places.
Source: I’m from Texas.
And here’s a petting picture to prove it.
Funny that Californians even have a strong opinion
It makes me happy to see the phrase “lightning bug” used so often here on Lemmy. I grew up calling them lightning bugs, yet I felt like it’s been ages since I heard or saw that word. Then I started coming here, and I see it in every post about this topic. The term brings me back to my childhood, picturing the way my parents’ backyard used to light up every summer evening.
Germans: “glow-wormsies”
(Glühwürmchen)
Huh, the more you know.
Yinz can get ahtta tahn.
Begone, Pittsburgher (more like Pittspeasant)
Aren’t those called fireflies?
Depends on where you’re from
My lack of mowing gives us a light show every summer night.
My yard is the only reason we have frogs and dragonflies.
Lightning bugs never get costed where I live 😞 I didn’t realize they were real until my mid teens even
West Coast?
Friendly reminder that lightning bugs need tall grasses present in addition to wildflowers and leaf litter. You can also improve their survival rates by removing artificial lighting or even just setting any safety lighting (like motion activated lamps) to their shortest “on” duration. Another obvious step is to avoid pesticides.
I have a small, yet still growing, grove of wild flowers and grasses. I just let my side yard grow whatever it wants (except invasives).
I believe like two people in this thread lol.
Just not maintaining your shit isn’t some great intentional effort and benefit to the community. Just letting your once normal lawn grow out of control is not rewilding anymore than throwing your food scraps out the window is composting.
Sure, vast expanses of perfectly manicured fescue is not helping fireflies or other bug species, but let’s be real, knee high thistles, dandelions, and crabgrass is not providing a profound service either.
…knee high thistles…
That all you got? Mine literally block the sun.
I’ve got Pine Warblers and Goldfinches up in that shit, and the flowers are absolutely covered in bees right now.
Also my yard sparkles at night. I’ll probably take the thistle down when it looks like its going to seed, since it’s not native, but while it’s providing useful habitat and not spreading, I’m going to let it be.
I mean, nobody asked if you believed anyone
👏👏👏
Sure, maybe. But my yard has frogs and fireflies in it and my neighbors’ don’t. That seems pretty empirical to me.
Luckily no one gives a shit what you believe.
And yet here you are commenting about it. Neat.
GTFO this thread you ignorant child
The best bit of your nonsense is where you say composting isn’t composting
I’m not maintaining most of my shit, half-assed maintaining some, and meticulously maintaining some (veg patch).
The meticulous part doesn’t do well unless the unmaintained part is left to do its thing. When people interfere it suffers. That’s how nature and biodiversity work. Leave it to do its thing and generally it works out itself. Every now and then you may need to intervene if something is becoming problematic and choking out everything else, but generally nature knows what it’s doing.
The thing that makes not maintaining your shit some great intentional effort, is the constant battle against other humans who wish to cut everything down and maintain order. If you’re a sole owner you can tell them to fuck off, but if members of your family disagree or it’s a communal space, that may be far more difficult.
Funny you chose those plants in particular though, because dandelions and various types of thistle are both recommended by the Royal Horticultural Society as being of particular aid to pollinator insects.
Wow you stepped right into the point and didn’t even notice.
Technically yes, you are composting by throwing food out your window and onto your yard. Technically yes, you are reclaiming space for insects and animals by not maintaining any area outside your house. Functionally, if you want to make compost, you designate a spot or get a container and learn anything about browns, greens, necessary turning, decomposition, and so on. If you want to help insects you might get a sod cutter and turn a section of (or all) of your outdoor space, you learn about what trees or flowers are native to your area and serve that purpose, then you plant. Unless your yard was grassland originally, there’s more work to do than just let it go until code enforcement comes and tells you to stop being a turd.
The most common weed plants are indeed good for pollinators, and spread chicken bones and pizza crusts will eventually add some value to your soil. However, I don’t think they bring you any more credit than, say, helping the bugs in your neighborhood by not cleaning up your food spills or washing your laundry.
Standing around high fiving because youre the nuisance house in the neighborhood who can’t be assed to pick up after yourself is fucking weird. Apparently you (specifically) can do some research so maybe you ARE being intentional, but that is not the general vibe I ever get from the “I don’t even now, you’re welcome neighbors!” threads like this usually devolve into.
Ha! This is me and my yard. Let’s go!
Shelbyeileen@lemmy.world 18 hours ago
My neighbor HATES me because I’ve been converting my backyard into clover. We have fireflies, Butterflies, bees, bunnies, all sorts of wildlife. It smells beautiful, but we are an oasis amongst upper-middle class lawn zombies… Mowing, edging, pesticide spraying, weed killing zombies.
Meanwhile, I have milkweed, clover, chive, snapdragons, black eyed susans, grapes, raspberries, lilac, echinacea, chamomile, lavender, hydrangea, coreopsis, and salvia. I welcome wasps that eat pests, I buy bags of ladybugs, I compost… I’m really trying. It’s only 1/4 an acre, but I’m trying.
captainlezbian@lemmy.world 16 hours ago
Please keep doing it. As a poor landless peasant I celebrate your attempt to preserve some of nature. You’re buying time, which is vitally important
Korhaka@sopuli.xyz 15 hours ago
Since getting my own place I can actually have a more natural garden, removed so much concrete. So many bees! I can even hear them from inside now that they are swarming around the poppies. Sage and to some extent chive flowers got a few bees earlier in the year but those flowers have died off now.
spicehoarder@lemm.ee 10 hours ago
Hey, that’s pretty cool! Just make sure they’re not actually starting to build a hive inside your walls
Jayjader@jlai.lu 18 hours ago
From 1 internet stranger to another, thank you. It really means a lot to me that people are doing what they can at their own level like you. I know how demotivating and isolating it can feel to be the only one doing the necessary work.
Sheldan@lemmy.world 8 hours ago
I dislike the mowing robots because they seem to encourage the Flatt grass only gardens and I hate them.
krolden@lemmy.ml 10 hours ago
Spray your neighbors lawn with salt water
wieson@feddit.org 9 hours ago
The cartago treatment