Worse than Competition
I knew
gardening was in real trouble when the Mayor proclaimed National Garden Week,
to honor gardening. It’s like a week to
honor housekeeping. But housekeeping is
harder to do without.
There is a
worse thing than a lot of competition: not enough competition. It shows in our local gardening
business. There are not enough people
willing to pull weeds for other people for money. There are so few of them that most landscape
maintenance companies cannot find them and have stopped looking.
They
mulch, spray, mow, hedge, and blow, but don’t pull weeds. They plant color annuals in blocks of potting
soil and boxes. Some spread “weed
barrier” cloth and cover it with bark or rocks, in a vain attempt to stop weeds
from growing. It doesn’t work very long,
and the cloth eventually shows and is ugly.
They mow over goatheads with riding mowers, spreading them from one
property to the next on their tires.
When a necessary
service is hard to find and expensive when one finds it, then people start to
think of it as a luxury. After all, few
of one’s neighbors are gardening, and good weeding is definitely more expensive
when you find someone willing to do it, being detail work that takes more time
than whacking weeds.
But God is
in the details, and the Devil lies in ignoring those details. Expensive lawns fill with weeds like
nutsedge, which can only be controlled by pulling. Proper maintenance is always better than the
alternative. But if one can’t find the
workers, one can’t do it.
Nor does a
business necessarily want to stand out from the norm. When government and most businesses are
content with mediocrity or even downright ugliness, it is safer to blend
in. People might look on a beautifully
maintained landscape as conspicuous consumption. Nor do most businesses want to spend more
money than they have to.
Likewise, large,
out of town corporations find it safer and cheaper to blend in to local
mediocrity, and do not budget for full maintenance, or in many cases, any
maintenance. This happened to Cascade
Block when they were bought out by Willamette Graystone.
Banks
don’t do any maintenance on foreclosed properties that the police don’t make
them do. The police cannot demand that
which the City does not do itself, though our code demands gardening every
square foot of the City, since it forbids mature and seeding weeds. But it can’t be done if the City can’t find
enough workers willing to do it on a regular basis.
In the
face of all this, gardening is endangered, and a gardener has a hard time
finding people willing to pay for proper landscape maintenance, because one
does not have enough competition.
9/17/13 Published
in News-You-Can-Use-by-Rycke.blogspot.com,
and GardenGrantsPass.blogspot.com.
Join Garden Grants
Pass in free gardening classes at
Greenwood and Schroeder Dog Parks; contact
Rycke Brown, Natural Gardener 541-955-9040 rycke@gardener.com
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