[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Home
Articles
About Water...
What To Do Around the Yard for a Healthier Lake
- Get a soil test and follow its recommendations for fertilizer use. Most lawns don't need fertilizer, and whatever excess is applied ends up in the water, feeding algae growth.
- Use compost and mulch to fertilize and hold water. These products release their nutrients slowly, providing long-term feed for your lawn and garden.
- Landscape with native groundcover and shrubs instead of lawn. Plants naturally adapted to local conditions require less maintenance and fertilizer.
- Choose drought-tolerant and pest-resistant plants. This minimizes the need for pesticides and excess watering.
- Tolerate some pest damage in my lawn or garden. Non-toxic insecticidal soaps, dormant oil sprays, and "helpful insects" such as ladybugs can help keep pests at bay just as well.
- Avoid using pesticides and herbicides on your property. Pesticides and herbicides kill beneficial organisms as well as bothersome ones. When it rains, they wash into storm drains and streams.
- Leave grass clippings on the lawn. Grass clippings and other organic matter provide natural slow-release fertilizer and improve the lawn's ability to hold water.
- Maintain a vegetated buffer along the stream, river or lake if you live along a shoreline. Buffer strips shade the stream, filter runoff, stabilize stream banks, prevent erosion, and provide habitat for animals.
- Avoid over-watering. Excess water runs off the lawn into the storm drain system.
- Re-seed thin areas in your lawn. Planting bare soil prevents erosion and sedimentation of water bodies.
From the Lake Champlain Committee's Lake Protection Pledge
[an error occurred while processing this directive]