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Be Like Turfmutt And Save The Planet One Yard At A Time!

Identify Your Backyarding Personality đź’Ż

Expert Landscaper

Expert Landscaper

Your yard makes neighbors green with envy. Your idea of a good time is spending the weekend working in your yard, and friends can count on you for advice about their own living landscapes.

Outdoor Athlete

Outdoor Athlete

The Outdoor Athlete’s gold medal backyard might include a strip of grass for running sprints, built-in outdoor fitness equipment, or even a lap pool to channel your inner Michael Phelps.

Nature Lover

Nature Lover

You prefer to spend your free time watching the birds, bats, butterflies and other wildlife that count on your yard for food and shelter. You cultivate a living landscape that supports a rich biodiversity with butterfly bushes, flowering plants, water sources, and trees and shrubs with nooks for nesting and food.

Work From Home Pro

Work From Home Pro

A quiet corner of the yard, complete with seating and shade (and a strong Wi-Fi signal), is the start of a beautiful and functional outdoor office. Other creature comforts like an outdoor heater, string lights, curtains, a warm rug, or even a semi-enclosed patio can enhance the space.

Kid Zone Creator

Kid Zone Creator

You know the safest place for your kids to be is in your own backyard, and you work hard to create an outdoor fun zone they will never want to leave. Sturdy turfgrass to play sports and pitch a tent, big trees to hang a swing, an elevated garden where you grow vegetables and herbs, and more are part of your backyard mix.

Pet Pamperer

Pet Pamperer

You take cues from your four-legged friends about your ideal backyard. You’ve planted sturdy turfgrass like Buffalo or Bermuda that can stand up to pet play, trees and shrubs are strategically planted for shade, and planting with purpose for you means keeping toxic plants out of the picture. (For a complete list, visit ASPCA’s list of non-toxic and toxic plants.)

Entertainer Extraordinare

Entertainer Extraordinare

Your backyard is the neighborhood hot spot. Family milestones, birthdays, graduations, reunions, BBQs – your yard is *the* place to gather. Your yard is set up for success with patio furniture, fire pit, yard games, plenty of outdoor seating, string lights, and maybe even an outdoor kitchen.

Zen Master

Zen Master

Enjoying your morning coffee on the balcony as songbirds serenade you. Meditating under the shade of a tree. De-stressing by swinging in a backyard hammock. Your backyard is your sacred space for rest, relaxation and rejuvenation. You know that spending time outside is good for your health and well-being, and that thanks to your yard these benefits are only steps away.

Follow These "Golden Rules" To Backyarding🥇

Follow these guidelines to have the healthiest and most purposeful landscape for you, your family, pets and the planet.

1

Know Your Climate Zone

Identify your zone, and make better choices around plant and tree selection, as well as water demands your living landscape may require.

USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map
2

Follow “Right Plant, Right Place”

Once you’ve identified your climate zone, choose plants, trees, bushes and flowering plants that thrive in your unique area. A healthy mix of native and climate-appropriate plantings will help keep your green space thriving—and require less maintenance!

3

Plant For Pollinators

A healthy mix of trees, shrubs and flowering plants will provide food and shelter for our wildlife. Pollinators, such as bees, bats, butterflies and birds are essential to the planet’s –and our—well-being.

4

Know Your Problem Plants

If you know which plants might be bad for you, your family and furry friends, you can keep problem plants out of the picture and design a yard that is good for people, pets and the planet.

ASPCA’s list of non-toxic and problem plants

Yard 101 🌱

Work in your yard, and it will work for you. It’s one of the credos of the TurfMutt Foundation. But what exactly do you need to know and do?

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Mutt Mulligan’s monthly e-newsletter is loaded with tips on outdoor living, enjoying green spaces and resources for teachers and families, as well as news from the TurfMutt Foundation.