• @RedditWanderer
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    695 months ago

    After his arguments failed to convince bylaw officers, Ruck took his case to court. Legal precedent supports naturalised gardening in Ontario, where in 1996 a court ruled that Sandy Bell, a Toronto gardener, had the right to express her environmental beliefs through gardening, overturning a fine issued to her under the city’s weeds and grass bylaw.

    But Ruck, who represented himself, lost his case on procedural grounds after arguing that the city had applied the bylaw unfairly and arbitrarily. Now on the hook for the municipality’s legal bills of $6,000 (£3,450), he has filed an appeal.

    Damn that sucks

    • @Nouveau_Burnswick
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      105 months ago

      I think might be a little more too this.

      Mississauga is pretty clear one two things: grass no longer than 20cm and a ban on 25 specific nuisance weeds.

      So just don’t grow grass or those 25 weeds?

      • @200ok
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        235 months ago

        Here are the “nuisance weeds”:

          • @[email protected]
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            5 months ago

            There’s a reason it is number 1

            It’s definitely a full-on Boss instead of a mini boss, it’s an incredibly aggressive plant originally from Japan that nothing wants to eat here on the continent. Think bamboo meets dandelion.

            Goats do not like it because of how bitter it is.

            It attracts monarchs who lay their eggs and caterpillars on it eat it and die :(

            It spreads aggressively through shoots and runners, under asphalt and concrete.

            You better be sure to pull the entire root because it can regenerate from a small piece.

            It flowers within weeks with dozens of flowers per vine, and each flower produces a seed pod with half a dozen seeds that are on dandelion-like structures so they get spread far and wide.

            You cannot compost it or put it in yard waste pickups because it will happily sprout out of these mediums.

            Most herbicides are ineffective, and it shrugs them off.

            Mechanical control is the most effective method of removal, but mowing it is just teasing it.

            Ask me how I know.

            • @Numenor
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              35 months ago

              How do you know?

            • Pandantic [they/them]
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              15 months ago

              We don’t have those where I am, but there are some ivy we have like that. So hard to kill, and the root is so deep once established.

  • @apfelwoiSchoppen
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    65 months ago

    Cities need reeducation to battle NIMBYs against this crap. In my region you see this all the time and he’s right: the application of the law is unequal. Cities will cite people with houses in poor and working class neighborhoods before citing anyone in rich neighborhoods with the same thing.

    This is probably resultant from two things:

    1. the city seeing poorer neighborhoods as projects to fix. They see the possible decline property values and thus tax.

    2. NIMBYs

  • Pandantic [they/them]
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    45 months ago

    I wish I could not mow my lawn. We have a million clover flowers and so many pollinators just chilling there and suddenly brummmmmmmmmmmm giant mower monster eats them. Why, what’s the point?

    • @Passerby6497
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      45 months ago

      It’s annoying AF, but I’ve started waiting until my lawn is approaching 8" (where the city starts getting pissy) to let everything try to go through as much of the lifecycle as it can before I have to chop it all down.

      • Pandantic [they/them]
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        25 months ago

        This is what I’m trying to do. I have one of those neighbors who mows once a week who will probably complain.