Does the UK not have ticks? I hold off as long as I can mowing in the US to help pollinators, but the moment I see my first tick, I’m mowing that shit flat.
UK Nature and Environment
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Note: Our temporary logo is from The Wildlife Trusts. We are not officially associated with them.
Our spring banner is a shot of Walberswick marshes, Suffolk by GreyShuck.
We do, though generally nowhere near as much as some other places. I've only ever seen maybe 2 in my life.
OTOH not mowing brings so much life into the garden; yesterday I found a grass snake in my garden, first wild snake I've ever seen
I've been doing this for a few years now.
What I have learned that helps a lot for the garden not ending up completely mad:
-
Mow at a higher height earlier in the year, but consistently.
This allows the smaller shoots of grass to establish.
Which in turn means that when you finally chop after May, you're left with relatively even grass.
Rather than chopping down fewer very long pieces of grass, and finding lots of under-grown gaps. -
Stop mowing the edges in April, and possibly pick one patch to leave un-mown until august. I normally do a corner.
The next year, you'd never know. -
Try to ID weeds that start growing, and hand-remove if required. Myself, I try to keep the Bindweed and Virginia Creeper in check.
I leave dandelions alone. There is another weed I've never got around to ID'ing, but I leave it alone now, and the bees love it. -
Keep them mower blades sharp. It helps prevent the grass getting ripped out of the ground when you do mow.