The Pollen-Trapping Power of a Lawn
The Pollen-Trapping Power of a Lawn
Thomas Leo Ogren
Think twice before you give up your lawn.
Lawns are often blamed for causing allergies but the right lawn
is actually a powerful allergy suppressor. The best lawn grasses
either do not bloom at all or will not bloom (and produce
pollen) if they are regularly mowed. What is little understood
or appreciated is that a thick lawn is a very effective pollen
trap. Pollen blows about and when it lands on smooth surfaces
(cars, cement, roofs, decks, large leaves) it doesn't often stay
there for long. The next good breeze to come along picks the
pollen up and gets it back into the air.
However, consider what happens when airborne pollen lands on a
well-maintained lawn. The lawn is composed of millions of long,
slim leaves and the pollen grains fall down between these
leaves. When it rains or when the lawn is sprinkled, the pollen
grains are pushed further downward, down to the ground level.
There the pollen is trapped and remains. An average sized lawn
at an ordinary house will trap and remove hundreds of millions
of grains of pollen each season. A strong growing lawn will trap
and remove far more pollen than it will ever produce itself.
To be fair here, a few types of lawns, such as ordinary common
Bermuda grass lawns, can be large producers of allergenic
pollen. However, common Bermuda produces much more pollen when
it is stressed. When a Bermuda grass lawn is kept well
fertilized, regularly mowed, and well watered, even it will
produce little pollen.
By the way, there are many wonderful new kinds of Bermuda grass
that don't ever produce any pollen. There are also types of
other grasses that are separate-sexed, and with these the female
lawns are also pollen-free. The bottom line here is this: a good
lawn is a thing of beauty; it adds considerably to the quality
of the landscape and to the actual property value. A healthy
lawn is the safest place for our children to play and where they
like to play the most. Our dogs and cats also appreciate a nice
lawn. A lawn is an excellent area for trapping rainwater from
storms. Rain that falls on a lawn will soak in, not run off to
the gutters.
A lush green lawn has powerful cooling qualities and will cut
our cooling costs in the heat of the summer. A well-kept lawn
will not produce pollen and it will trap millions of grains of
allergenic pollen from nearby trees and shrubs. A good lawn is a
marvelous thing!
Certain types of lawn mowers may kick up pollen that does land
on a lawn. A rear-bagging mower will trap and bag pollen along
with the grass clippings. A well-maintained mulching mower will
deposit pollen back down below the mower and then it will work
its way downward with irrigation. A side-discharge mower, used
without a bagger, may kick up some loose pollen and this is not
recommended. Push reel mowers bring up little pollen and most
power reel mowers are also pollen-safe.
There are some allergenic people though who will react
negatively to volatile organic compounds that are released when
the blades of grass are cut. People who experience this problem
would be wise to get someone else to do the actual mowing.
A few types of grasses are somewhat stiff and prickly and less
pleasant to lie on. These grasses may irritate the skin of
sensitive people. Bahia grass and some of the types of zoysia
grass will cause this itchiness.
Leaf blowers do in fact kick up a good deal of pollen that may
be lying about on cement. If you have allergies it is a good
idea to wear a facemask when using a leaf blower. Do not blow
towards the direction of your house either. It is always a good
idea to close the windows in your house too, before using a leaf
blower. Pollen is tiny and can easily pass right through the
tightest window screens.
Lastly, I want to re-emphasize that the right lawn is a very
effective pollen trap. Some years ago I measured this by
sprinkling cedar pollen on different surfaces and then testing
to see how much of this pollen became airborne. Of all the
surfaces we tested (car roofs, shingles, cement, bricks,
different ground cover plants, gravel) none was nearly as
effective at capturing incoming pollen as a thick lawn.