Your neighborhood calls it “yard waste.” I call it a pile of free fertilizer waiting for a truck. As summer hits Minnesota, I’m watching curb lines fill with bags of leaves, grass clippings, and garden debris, and it’s a perfect snapshot of how weird suburban lawn culture has gotten. We strip our yards of organic matter, then wonder why the soil struggles and the lawn needs constant help to stay green.
I break down why healthy soil depends on organic matter and decomposition, and why forests thrive without a weekly cleanup crew. When we remove every leaf and dead stem, we’re not just chasing tidiness, we’re draining soil health and wiping out habitat that beneficial insects, native bees, butterflies, and birds rely on. I also connect this simple change to my FEFS framework: eliminate chemicals, feed birds and pollinators, save clean water, and store carbon. Better water retention, less runoff, fewer inputs, and more life can start with what you decide to do with a rake and a mower bag.
Then we keep it practical with a lazy compost pile approach that avoids the “compost perfection” trap. No lab coats, no obsessive ratios, just a simple system that lets microbes, moisture, and time do the heavy lifting while you rebuild soil over the long haul. If you’re dealing with an HOA or a neighbor who panics at one fallen leaf, you’ll still get ideas you can use without making your yard look abandoned.
If you’re ready to stop exporting fertility from your yard, hit play, try one small change this week, and tell me what you’re leaving behind. Subscribe, share this with a fellow lawn-stressor, and leave a review so more people can find A Better Yard Podcast.
Learn more about getting your own Rebel Garden at ABetterYard.org.
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