Amid California’s Drought, Business is Booming for Lawn Painters

As California endures year three of one of the worst droughts on record, residents have sacrificed their manicured lawns and blooming gardens, among other things.
But in an effort to brighten up otherwise dead and desolate areas, some landscapers are profiting from painting lawns green, the National Journal reports.
California tightened restrictions on water earlier this summer, fining residents up to $500 for using the scarce resource to shower lawns or wash driveways. Though flourishing lawns are far and few between, looking at blighted landscapes haven’t made it any easier on residents.

“It became a real eyesore, and we live in an area where everyone keeps their yard really nice,” said Jay Torres, a San Bernardino resident. “I heard about a service where people paint your lawn so it looks like the real thing and thought, why not? “

Lawn painting services continue to sprout up throughout the state, using dye that’s typically reserved for golf courses and athletic fields and lasts up to six months. The dye is billed as safe and nontoxic, but more importantly, landscapers are promoting the fact that it’s less expensive than replacing grass altogether with gravel or concrete.

“People think it sounds ridiculous when they first hear about it,” said Jim Power operations manager of LawnLift, a grass paint company in San Diego. “But they try it, and instantly they’re hooked.”

Power said his company has doubled sales this year while another company, Xtreme Green Grass, claims sales have shot up 60 percent. Landscaping company A Lucky Lawn in Long Beach recently sat down with Santa Fe Springs officials, who are considering the idea of painting the withering grass across their public parks, according to owner Drew McClellan.

But as business booms, the drought continues. And until experts are able to get a better handle on water practices, at least residents have one alternative in keeping things green.

MORE: Even as the Drought Continues, Californians Can Drink From a Firehose of Solutions

 
 

This Texas Solar Farm Relies on a Flock of Sheep to Perform Maintenance

A solar farm in San Antonio, Texas is not being sheepish about its newest landscapers: a group of four-legged friends that are keeping the 45 sprawling acres perfectly manicured under the sweltering Texas sun.
The farm’s operator, OCI Solar Power, put around 90 Barbados-cross sheep out to pasture in April to graze and serve as an environmentally-friendly, cheap alternative to maintenance, the Texas Tribune reports. Though the practice is used elsewhere in the U.S., including California and South Carolina, sheep grazing is not common among Texas solar farms.

“It was good to see it was actually quite common” elsewhere, said Charlie Hemmeline, executive director of the recently formed Texas Solar Power Association. “The fact that you’ve got a solar plant there isn’t necessarily restrictive to other uses such as grazing.”

The 4.4-megawatt solar farm is part of a larger series of 400-megawatt plants that San Antonio’s municipal utility, CPS Energy, intends on adding to its system by 2016. Just one megawatt of solar energy can heat and cool up to 100 homes on a hot, Texas summer day, according to the Tribune, and in more mild conditions, can power even more houses.

OCI Solar’s experiment with sheep grazing has worked out well despite recent heavy rains. None of the sheep have chewed through cables or hopped up onto the solar panels, unlike goats, which are more prone to that type of behavior.

Not only are the solar panels good for soaking up the rays. In the blazing sun, they provide a shady respite for the sheep.

Officials contend sheep grazing not only boosts the local agricultural economy, but is also cheaper than hiring human landscapers, who have to steer large lawn equipment in sometimes difficult-to-reach areas.

The sheep aren’t the only animals living at the solar farm. The company has also employed two herding dogs to help stave off lingering coyotes and help protect the sheep.

OCI Solar intends to keep the current herd around for about 10 months before a Texas breeder will swap the sheep with a new crew. If all goes well, they might add the animals to keep its expansive 500-acre, 41-megawatt-plant in sheep shape.
MORE: EnergyCube: The Pop-up Power Station Revolutionizing Solar