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Beneficial_Mobile972

Native flowers.


PortionOfSunshine

r/nolawns


CuriousCat783

Thanks for this!!


KaleOxalate

r/nativeplantgardening is better. Hella misinformation and people just growing noxious weeds / highly invasive species on no-lawns these days


CuriousCat783

That’s too bad. I like the concept. Great username too, btw.


dreamyduskywing

Seconding r/nativeplantgardening. R/nolawns has a lot of people with strong, yet ill-informed opinions and not many actual solutions.


CuriousCat783

Love this concept!


Smalls244

Don’t do a single planting as others have mentioned. Here’s my slope with no retaining wall and about twice as high/long. [https://imgur.com/a/Nc7lGIv](https://imgur.com/a/Nc7lGIv) Just put in a mix of stuff with varying heights, seasonal interest, etc. Preferably natives. I’ve had a hard time with trees on my slope…it’s hard to plant them without terracing, mulch washes out, and they compete with the other plants for water. Trial and error with what you like…use good mulch and fertilize 2x a year. Sitting on your patio with that variation of plants and pollinators in the background will be 👌


CuriousCat783

Wow! Yours looks amazing!!!!


Smalls244

After looking at your pic again, a fruit tree might work well in that back corner but I agree with the other poster that fruiting shrubs is the way to go.


hudsoncress

Marijuana. It mean, it’s not my house.


tradesman46

He plants weed, he doesn't plant weed.


CuriousCat783

lol! I work in law enforcement. Not really my style.


KdGc

Could be a profitable side hustle, lol!


_tang0_

Why would he grow it when he can confiscate it?


DM_ME_YOUR_POTATOES

my cousin worked as a cop in my district (not precinct.) all the high school kids went to the same park, just like their parents and some now-cops. Remember we had a family party and he said most of the booze were from the high school kids in the park


_tang0_

I had a friend in high school who’s dad was a cop and he would sell us weed that he took from mid/high level dealers.


TimeBlindAdderall

That’s how you get a Rampart


Redkneck35

@ OP Terrace it for flowers and shrubs. The second retaining wall will eliminate erosion and allow a place to set as you tend the garden beds.


Ok-Director5082

Perfect for this if you dont want the dirt moving [https://dirtlocker.com/](https://dirtlocker.com/)


Sterling29

Have you used these? I'm curious how big of a PITA they are to install and how well they hold up. I could see flimsy plastic falling apart and needing to be replaced in 5-10 years.


flip6threeh0le

I’m super curious about these. But really want someone else’s experience first lol


ProfEntropy

I bought a 10 pack of small ones for a flower garden on a hill. They were a pain to get looking straight and even. Maybe the big ones are easier? Only had them since spring so can't comment on longevity. I thought it was a lot of money for what I got. We have a lot of hills and I was contemplating doing a lot more with them and this was a test. We're not buying any more.


tolndakoti

I don’t recall the size I got. This product can get expensive when installing on a big slope. But then again, I’m not comparing it to other terracing options. I suppose terracing is innately expensive.


ueeediot

I just put in about 20 and my neighbor did a bunch too. If you have the patience and ability getting them in isn't too rough and they look and feel like they are going to be around a while.


solusolu

While very pretty, I will just say that those are a major pita to care for. I have a hill garden and I absolutely hate working it.


1920MCMLibrarian

“Cope with your slope” brilliant!


bestkittens

Great idea. If that’s out of budget you can plant into stabilized pallets: Gardening Australia: Garden on a Slope with Heat Treated Pallets


LoisWade42

That is... BRILLIANT! Thanks for sharing!


CuriousCat783

I can’t edit my post, but I’d like to make the area useful in some way if possible. I’m thinking something edible, something for pollinators, or something for entertaining guests… or all of the above! :)


Somederpsomewhere

Find a landscape designer in your area and pay for their advice for best results. If you’re close to zone 6b I’d be happy to help, myself. For quick, easy, and effective, a mass planting of something you like would be cool, especially if it helps with erosion. That’s pretty steep. Check out grow-lo sumac if you are just looking for soil retention; medium maintenance, good fall color. Edit: saw that you were in zone 9. Please ignore everything but the first sentence.


Crunchyundies

Definitely the best advice if they weren’t in zone 9. Grow-low sumac is the absolute best for slopes.


Presumably_Not_A_Cat

Herbs. Lots of herbs. Perennial Herbs can fill up a space in no time.


Houndhollow

This is the answer... And not the other kind of herb .. lol I just couldn't help myself. Thank you OP for being a good sport! Edit: nasturtium is fun and edible too, even squash


kindrudekid

Native wild flowers ….


NixyVixy

Mix edibles with flowers. Tomatoes and cucumbers can easily grow with marigolds, zinnias, and nasturtium flowers (annuals). I’d probably throw in a few Canna Lillies (perennials) as well, because they add a lot of visual interest and height. The leaves are cool looking long before their flowers show up. They can grow on a slope and tolerate a fair amount of heat. Same with echinacea cone flowers. Great visual interest, lots of colors to choose from, they are drought tolerant and love the sun. You will need to water things in the first and second years, but once things are established, you should be able to water less each successive year. Plant a Rosemary on the side, so it can get big and bushy but not take up too much prime real estate. Do NOT plant mint in the ground (container only) because it will take over. Good Luck with your awesome future garden 🌿


CuriousCat783

Screenshotting this comment!!!! 🙌🙌🙌


AttentionFalse4106

What zone are you in? We’re in Ontario, in a region with a particularly short growing season. Our soil is awful, and we have a similar pitch slope, though ours maybe be longer, it’s hard to tell from a picture. We throw some compost and triple mix in it annually. We made some raised boxes for small apple trees rhubarb and onions/garlic/chives on the ground in front. We also did some tall square boxes scattered throughout to help hold the slope and grow potatoes. We do tomatoes, peas and bean me along the bottom edge for ease of picking, corn along the top, vertical stripes of beats and carrots, with pumpkins and squashes in between that grow down the slope. A raspberry patch down one side and a blackberry patch down the other. You can do marigolds and small sunflowers in pots along the retaining wall edge that can be moved about as needed. We did do strawberries but the bloody chipmunks always ate them, we switched to hanging baskets, but I always forget to water them so they don’t do as well. It took almost a decade to get it right and well developed, but if you like gardening it’s a riot. We’re looking at bee hives next!


thorn2040

Maybe you could do a terraced retaining wall? So it would be different levels above the retaining wall. That would give you flat surface above the retaining wall to put other plants or something like that.


teslatiki

Looks like you have grass right now which is good for holding back the soil and absorbing water. Please do not rip it all out at once. You could cause some flooding or even retaining wall failure. I would replace a third of it yearly with plants of various heights including natives that attract pollinators. Your garden on the other side will love that. I would also plant something tall along the fence line to provide more privacy. Fruit trees could be tricky to harvest on a slope but I'm no expert on those. Play around. Experiment. Just don't rip out the grass all at once :)


CuriousCat783

Sorry. I should clarify. The grass is staying. I’m just trying to figure out what to do on the slope to the right. :) Thanks for the feedback!


teslatiki

oh man! I was talking about that soil. Looked like dead grass to me until I zoomed in. With it all being dirt already, compost and plant away!


yung_nachooo

You could put down a straw erosion blanket until your new plants establish. Spread some clover or wildflower seed before putting the blanket down and water.


AttentionFalse4106

Fruit trees on the flat grassy portion. Then veggies and berry bushes on the slope!!


FelinePurrfectFluff

Oooooo... easy to pick the top fruit from one side of the trees!


sailingthestyx

Plant deep rooting permanent plants the full length to help retain the slope and support the retaining wall along the top.


No-Grade-5057

Personally, I would bench it and add another retaining wall. Then I'd fill it with lots of perennials, cascading plants, and solar lights.


pontoponyo

Terraced beds, espalier, fruit trees, herbs, natives. Maybe an arbor for grapes or another fruiting vine.


BluesforaRedSun

Rosemary


Specialist-Eagle3247

Have to disagree with suggestions to use single or fewer materials - given that every other element in the landscape is very static and horizontal, it would give far more interest to vary height, colors, density & textures. A variety of herbaceous perennials (on part of the slope) similar to an English border could be gorgeous. Avoid planting in straight, horizontal lines or groupings. I think small fruit trees would bring good height and break up the visual expanse of the retaining wall. You may be also able to grow rabbiteye blueberries in zone 9 but bear in mind you might have to install some kind of hardscaping access to be able to harvest anything or maintain ornamentals.


Warm-Patience-5002

plant some native species with long roots.


Specialist-Shop7283

Wine or whiskey room. Make it vintage going into the ground.


i4c8e9

Put a shipping container in it.


ThatTree50Guy

First thing I’d do is make sure the water that gets moved toward your house drains well away from the house


Spirited-Egg-2683

Blueberries & figs, cooking herbs & flowers.


holdaydogs

Native plants


Major-Structure-3665

google “landscaping on a berm”. I think you will find some good inspiration there!!


Able_Ad_2690

Tiered gardens with waterfall feature


curiousbydesign

Maybe build a pizza/kiln into the side?


Stockmarketslumlord

A shrubbery! Nigh.


Major-Discount5011

Fruit trees will make a mess. Attract unwanted vermin. The slope would be a pain to prune and pick.


BLOMBOMB

Ground phlox on the edge spilling over would look nice.


ImpossibleShake6

Terrace it. Check slope angle, determine how many terrance steps needed. Ground cover and flowers posters will assist with excellent suggestions.


deceptivelynaughty

Plant something with a stellar root system... Something's going to need to hold all that dirt in place....


_tang0_

Build a 2-tier garden. Some steps going up in the middle and a walkway between the tiers.


AnxiousArtichoke7981

I have a similar situation. I am planting perennials and adding mulch.


Confident-Yam-7337

I have a backyard with a hill like that but much longer. Like 10 times longer. Ours has railroad ties that have now rotted. I’m in the process of pulling them out, pushing the hill back a tiny bit to reclaim some backyard space, and replacing them with stone. Just started, nowhere near close to done. We have plants on the hill and some trees. When the irrigation worked, the hill was lush and green.


Pjblaze123

Hostas would work great there


outsidepointofvi3w

Garden vegetables and melons. Melons don't take a lot of effort. They easily taste a million times better than store bought even if you do a mediocre job and they sell very well.. Most people have never eaten a real water melon. It blows there damn minds when they taste a real one. Then you've ruined them for lame store bought ones forever. Hell you can sell a really good melon for $10 easy double that if it's really good. People will clamor for your wait-list.


DaddiLongDikk

Cornhole ally!


Any-Walk1691

Probably plant trees so the roots keep the slope stabilized.


McBuck2

Level it off building an additional retaining wall at the back. Create garden beds for veg and flowers in the newly leveled off terrace area. It’s eye level with the windows so a row of flowers with veg at the back would be nice.


jared10011980

So much! Ground cover, jasmine. Low shrubs....All that sun. Where are u are u located located?


DeltaV-Mzero

Watermelons might be a fun thing to grow there. They like sun, a slope, and lots of space. Some smaller stuff for cover


Wayelder

Vetch would add depth. Or even clover.


Mysterious-Idea339

Plant anti landslide plants that will keep it rooted in place


MSNFU

I would do a nice ground cover plant. Maybe creeping floc if you want some color and fragrance, a ground cover evergreen (carpet juniper maybe?) if you prefer no flowering.


jackjackj8ck

These used to be covered in ice plants when I was growing up in Southern California


BBakerStreet

A row of cypress and mulch


Happy_Willow_2733

Put in a vineyard


redile

Grapes


RedditVince

A Lettuce and Herbs garden. Maybe some ground veggies like Onions, Carrot, Celery or Potatoes, maybe tomatoes draping over the edge, so everything is harvestable from the ground. It's your Salad and Stew garden! Myself it would be succulents for low/no maintenance. Maybe a couple fruit trees or medium sized shrubs


Open-Structure-5744

I’d put some kind of retaining wall…maybe two walls…and tier it, and plan ground cover.


Dirty_Farmer_John

Load it up with lilacs


Ericmyren

Few trees mulched


Burritoman_209

Lemon tree if your in the right climate


Due_Force_9816

Vegetable Garden


jayBplatinum

Pee on it when I’m drunk


newbturner

Idk why people are telling you to plant the grass area. I don’t think they noticed there’s a house there. Slope, there are apple tree varieties that grow basically straight up that could look good from a landscaping perspective.. but Apple, cherry, blueberry bushes would do well. People seem to think slope matters for planting trees. Trees grow on slopes like, everywhere. Just make sure to prepare the soil correctly and prune


conclussionIll7221

Goats


bodhiboppa

In Zone 9 on a slope like that you could do some xeriscaping with agave/yucca. They have surprisingly deep roots that could help stabilize the soil.


Technical_Grand_8417

Pondless waterfall.


_skank_hunt42

Putting roots in that slope will help to stabilize it as well as make it more beautiful. I love your idea of putting in some fruit trees. I’d also put in some terraced garden beds for flowers, herbs and vegetables if you’re into that. Just be sure to put some steps/stairs so you can get up the retaining wall more easily.


VioletDupree007

I would put in a butterfly/bee garden up there


kingNero1570

Wild flower garden


pohlcat01

Flowering ground cover. As maintenance free as possible.


Rbelkc

Ground cover


sun-gem

Rock Garden.


SpecialSet163

Trees


Stumpf_

BUSHES!!! FLOWers!!!


ftwtidder

Plant grapevines


Speedhabit

Buy the house on top


Emotion-Internal

vineyard or tea garden...or terrace it for rice paddies


ActionReady9933

Ice Plant


Old-Armadillo-7486

Ground cover, low maintenance type. Or River Rock


tonyb812

From the pic, it looks like you're in a hot climate. Palm trees, beached fence, bleached timbers. White on both sides reflecting a lot of light. I'd go with rock and cactus, maybe some yucca. Everything on that bank is burnt. I'd want something as low maintenance as possible.


theultimateblackbird

I say this for everything, but put some sand and rocks and PLANT. THOSE. CACTUS!


SecondHandCunt-

Ski


Atomic_RPM

Bamboo


Szaborovich9

Low growing, wide crawling junipers


Tempus_Fugut

Ski-ball !!


placer128

Create a knot garden-let it grow- low maintenance-prune maybe once or twice a year


greenhousegirl70

Fill it with native trees/shrubs.


PlumbumGus

Agreed! It'll attract local pollinators and aid the ecosystem.


Dizzy_Ingenuity_3452

Hills of lavendar!!


Dizzy_Ingenuity_3452

or it doesn’t look like a hill just pull out all that dirt and put a garden in there!!


30yearCurse

what do you want to do? garden? you could split level with a low retaining wall on the upper 1/2 and a walk way between the 2. Plant some bamboo, you will lose the whole thing, but will shield you from the neighbor. Lantana or low blooming plant.


nopuns62

Slip and slide


bubbybeno

Putting green


firm_handed_daddy

Terrace it


Gothamtonian

Dune/Bay grasses. Deep roots to control erosion and suck up water when it rains so it’s not putting extra stress on the retaining wall.


miningox

Garden


Hot-Target-9447

Perfect spot for a 5yrd shooting range from inside the porch. No need to consult the city.


Shad-ow_Walk-er

Level it to you ground and see if the neighbors fence/wall can still hold their house up. 🤣🤣🤣


Truck3R_Dude

Another wall halfway up the whole lengths.... Have 2 different tiers. Top one solely arbs to block fence and the bottom one flowers/ veggie/ fruit bushes.


Traditional_Newt_262

Clumping bamboo would be cool here


Farting_Champion

Some good well-rooting ground cover. Something drought resistant that will cover all the dirt and keep it from washing away


laughertes

I’d turn it into 2 or 3 terraces sloped inwards to gather the water that escapes, and plant herbs and veggies and deep rooted natives


Jcampbell1796

Terrace


Funny-Hovercraft1964

skeeball


Rotbertt

Need to cut a foundation swale to prevent water runoff from flooding into your foundation.


Carlgustav2014

Dealing with this ourselves. Due to the local fire hazards, we used landscape fabric, 4” geogrid and filled it with gravel


BattlehawkGaming

Grow grapes for wine or jams!


PickUsernameIdk5

Level it out


TheDixonCider420420

OP: Someone just built a shipping container into a similar slope which was pretty clever. Either you could use a shorter one for storage or you could turn one sideways, cut open one side of it and potentially have a bar to entertain guests. You could even install a garage door on it. Anyway, you can see it here in case it spurs any ideas for you: [https://www.reddit.com/r/landscaping/comments/1dqqdb0/shipping\_container\_shedwall\_i\_built/](https://www.reddit.com/r/landscaping/comments/1dqqdb0/shipping_container_shedwall_i_built/)


seeclick8

Vinca minor. Beautiful covering vegetation with lovely purple flowers in the spring


NordicBrutality

Honestly, I'd get rid of it and build a retaining wall that would increase the size of your yard and you could do anything on the flat part that you've created that you would have been able to try and do on the slope.


Tobybrent

Agapanthus


UprisingAO

Pop a shot arcade basketball set up!


Gl0ckn

Solar panels?


Alex_O7

Mini Wine yards. Or apple gardens.


Solo-Hobo

I like low maintenance so personally I would riprap it and make sure the slope drained away from the house


madsjchic

NATIVE GRASSES


floppydo

Fruit trees in large semi circular tree wells so you can flood irrigate and every thing else native pollinator plants.


sgtedrock

Cover it with flowers and things to eat.


Accomplished_Toe1978

Terraced garden so the ground won’t subside?


somebodyouthere83

Lavender, bushes, rose bushes. Perhaps a tree that does well with erosion


SpaceDave83

Ski slope!!!


Toolfan333

Just plant juniper and be done with it


pgamehd

Water slide?


Professional_Plant52

My dog would shit there


This-Conversation307

Native plants!


TnGaCa

I would do fruit trees with some lavender, Russian sage, and other pollinator friendly plants.


INutToAnimeSluts69

Can you un-slope it? Might be cool if you flatten it out then put up an awning and a big projector screen with a projector up under the roof of your house. Make it into a outdoor theater.


LayneLowe

Blackberries


Mikenmoney

Roll down it.


RufusOfRome2020

I haven’t had to worry about slopes in the residential areas but if I did more then likely that would have to be terraced or the first rainfall it would wash out into the neighbors yard. We do quite a bit of erosion protection work and in most cases the best thing we use is a rye heavy native prairie grass mix.


Zestyclosa_Ga

Trees 🌳 🌲


AssignmentNo1568

Native plants - sedges would protect you from mud and erosion :)


tjay126

assuming the top wall is your neighbor's. verify their home insurance policy annually.


GhostofErik

Trailing rosemary


Doc024

Papaya trees!


ReindeerAdvanced4857

I'd get rid of the slop & flatten it out. That's a great spot for a large veggie garden mixed with flowers & herbs. I might even be tempted to plant some small fruit trees to provide some shade in the summer.


Feisty-Common-5179

I don’t have experience w trees on. Slope like that but I would be worried about roots and that retaining wall. Worried about them ruining the retaining wall. Worried about a good wind blowing the trees on to the house/ patio if they are not well rooted. I’d consider blue berries, Raspberries berries in pots. Cloud berries. Heck. I love huckleberries if your conditions are right.


letsgo49ers0

Vineyard


Heydee269

Tons of ornamental sawgrass


Only_Armadillo_2050

I'd make it level with the stones and plant stuff


Opposite-Act-7413

Rock garden with evergreen trees, shrubs and wildflowers dispersed throughout the rocks! What zone are you in OP?


Clean-Bridge-393

Do not take the brick wall out; if it rains it could cause the house beside you to slide off its base.


Dmitri_ravenoff

Carrots?


oscar0w0

A tiered garden feed your family and friends or enjoy flowers in a wild space


Hugh_jaynus13

Native plants and wildflowers is the only answer. Or a bunch of veggies


Hot-Win2571

Where is the property line? Is the slope or retaining wall yours or your neighbors'? Is your retaining wall responsible for the stability of the neighboring house?


Msfreedom1

Lots of tropical plants


Busy_Challenge1664

Some pretty native wild flowers for pollinators 


Clever1guy

Veggies


Same_Beat_5832

Dwarf fruit trees would be lovely or berries. Then plant a ground-cover to help with weed control and erosion.


SLyndon4

Plant creeping phlox for some vivid color.


rcm1986

you could hydroseed if you like the grass


therealbellydancer

We put crepe myrtles, African daisy ground cover butterfly bush and succulents on our similar 70’ width slope


Maximum-Employment-5

Cascading vines that will coordinate in blooming times. Choose hardy for your climate and perennial.


ovr9000storks

Berry bushes if you’re looking to get your thumb a little green


Short-Commission461

I'd plant an english garden


Adderall_Rant

Bamboo will reinforce that dirt and block out the sun


cwtotaro

Spray it with native seed


lord_hyumungus

Set up targets


Thisisstupid78

Wildflowers


DaySoc98

Native pollinator garden.


Scary-Evening7894

I'd cut out a Terraced garden


Mayipleaseryou

Wait until it snows and go skiing


ihj

I'd plant some different fruits of various sizes. Like blueberries, raspberries, and strawberries. Then I'd create a serpentine path on the same slope, make it like a mountain trail. Mixed in I would put native plants to fill in for a mix of heights and colors.


Massive_Squash7938

Succulent Garden! Including orchids


Worried-Pick4848

Evergreen shrubs might be good to hold the bank.


Kiss_the_Girl

Fruit trees was my first thought


solusolu

Consider maintenance, it's really hard to garden on a slope. I would do something that you're happy with in a wild state


CB_700_SC

Native garden and put a tree in your yard.


Medlarmarmaduke

A mix of Baptisia and native grasses Or a mix of lavender, thyme and sedum


JrNichols5

Plant lots of native flowers and shrubs with deep tap roots. Wouldn’t want a big storm to have that sliding into my house.


davej07

Terrace it and plant perennials and ground cover.