Maintaining a Xeriscape Lawn: Year One and Year Two Playbook
A xeriscape lawn doesn’t maintain itself in year one — but by year two, it mostly does. Here’s what to expect, what to do, and what to stop doing as it establishes.
A xeriscape lawn doesn’t maintain itself in year one — but by year two, it mostly does. Here’s what to expect, what to do, and what to stop doing as it establishes.
Xeriscaping’s paradox: drought-tolerant plants need consistent moisture to establish. Seed them wrong and they fail — not because they can’t handle drought, but because they never got started.
A bare slope loses topsoil every time it rains. Deep-rooted native grasses and erosion control mixes hold soil, look natural, and need no irrigation after the first season.
Your HOA wants a green, even, manicured lawn. You want a lawn that doesn’t cost you $200/month in water. These aren’t mutually exclusive — here’s how to get both.
Microclover fixes its own nitrogen, needs half the water of turf grass, and stays green through summer droughts. It looks like a lawn but acts like a ground cover.
Buffalograss covers the lawn. But the slopes, borders, and accent beds? That’s where native ornamental grasses do their best work — and ask almost nothing in return.
Buffalograss is a North American native that uses up to 75% less water than Kentucky bluegrass, mows itself to 4–6 inches, and asks almost nothing after its first season. Here’s how to grow it.
Every 1% increase in soil organic matter lets your ground hold an extra 20,000 gallons of water per acre. The best investment in a xeriscape isn’t a new drip system — it’s your soil.
Replacing a traditional lawn with drought-tolerant grass cuts your water bill 40–70% and your mowing schedule by half. Here’s how to choose, seed, and establish the right grass for your yard.
Most xeriscape projects fail at the design stage — wrong plant in a wet zone, or dry plant where water collects. Here’s how to map your yard before you buy a single seed packet.