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Whoa. From
bitterlawngnome:

From here, more information available on how they got this data (interesting!) and the ecological impact of lawns here.
I like having an open space that I own, on which I can practice stilt tricks and play with kids and lay in the sun on warm days, but even I have to admit that our national lawn fetish is really kind of creepy.
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The map shows how common lawns are across the country, despite a wide variability of climate and soils. Indeed, the scientists who produced the map estimate that more surface area is devoted to lawns than to any other single irrigated crop in the country. For example, lawns appear to cover more than three times the number of acres that irrigated corn covers. The large image shows a more detailed look at fractional lawn surface area in urban areas. In many cities, the urban core—where buildings, parking lots, and roads are densest—appears paler green.
From here, more information available on how they got this data (interesting!) and the ecological impact of lawns here.
I like having an open space that I own, on which I can practice stilt tricks and play with kids and lay in the sun on warm days, but even I have to admit that our national lawn fetish is really kind of creepy.
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Date: 2011-02-09 01:47 pm (UTC)Fortunately the conservationists have made some changes to the law in Missouri so my father's been able to plant a native garden on one side of the house. But, as you say, legality is one thing, social pressure another. He's gotten one nasty anonymous note about it and he can tell that most of the other neighbours aren't happy, but they're too passive-aggressively Midwestern to say anything to his face, even after he's invited them to.