So as I was finishing my weekly lawn maintenance today (started yesterday) I was thinking to my self am I the only one that takes 5-6 hours a week to maintain there yard. I have just shy of 2 acres on a lake in Florida and it takes on average of at least 2 hours of mowing, an hour of trimming, an hour of push mowing, and and hour for misc. stuff and blowing off driveway/bricks.
Nice place you have there.
Whllst I too like large gardens/lawns I don't have the time (nor the inclination) to spend 5-6+hrs/week maintaining our 3acre+house yard on the farm -at most in spring/summer I probably average 2-3hrs/week (& in Autumn/Winter maybe tops an 1hr/week).
To stop it all being a long"chore" I've tried to be a little "creative" to save time & worked to our long term landscaping plan - I like to have more time to admire & enjoy our "outdoors" wth friends than actually doing the garden "work" (& I also farm fulltime, so garden maintenance isn't viewed as relaxation ) :-
- Landscaping via garden beds, walls, ponds, tree planting/shading to slow lawn growth ..etc & breaking it into various smaller lawn areas (that way if I'm pushed for time I can keep the area closest to the house in top condition & leave other areas for a week or so) & grading "rolling undulations" so none of it is bowling green level (breaking up the view IMO makes it a bit more "park like" & smaller lawn areas don't seem to look untidy so quickly), there's also a feeling of "accomplishment" as you can take time to tidy up or even major rejuvenate small areas without compromising the whole look of the yard
- Having easy care plants, the "right" gear(ours still isn't the newest or most expensive, most is old/ secondhand, though we can now also afford a few nice extra's like task specific ride on's, including 1 to "bash" around in those tough areas) & designing the layout to enable the use of the largest/quickest most practical tool for the task - generally my philosophy is I'd rather trim 1/yr with a chainsaw than use a hedge trimmer every other week, so most plants are either big tree types or very slow growing/low maintenance ornamentals/vines/hedges
- As for weeding/edging, with me it's either a flame gun or "round up" & as a last resort mulch.
The photo's below are a small selection of the yard/work we've done to make the regular maintenance a lot less time consuming which also may give you a few time saving options to consider:
1. Looking back across same pond referred to in "5", reeds used for pond "edging" to save work, sandstone retaining wall/garden on right breaks direct view of lawn on right of house
2. More front lawn,mostly deciduous tress to shade/slow lawn in summer, the driveway gravel spills/mulches to the bordering jacaranda trees mid frame, the bushy paperbark tree on the far right is the same tree mid fame in "3"
3. Top of sandstone wall garden ( brick edging to lawn) & lawn/shade trees & unseen garden beds beyond
4. Taken a little to the right of "5" showing lawn almost to garden (low maintenance moss covered brick edge/border just visible which also borders driveway to lawn) & sandstone retaining wall garden against driveway to right
5. Lawn directly in front of the house, on the right sloping towards one of the ponds (keeps the moisture in the ground keeping the grass green & more water means less lawn to mow + crayfish to catch !) mid frame driveway with culvert under sandstone drain running to pond & slow growing trim vines to create hedge "bridge" effect
Took a few years to get it to this stage, we followed the original plan we created & broke it down into bite sized "development" chunks as time & money allowed, must admit I have more fun "buillding/creating" than "maintaining"....just wish I had some of the learnings & gear I have now as when we started out...