Let It Grow: These Michigan Cities All In For ‘No Mow May’
Making its return this month is “No Mow May.” This initiative aims to promote the health of bees and other pollinators in Michigan. Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti’s city councils unanimously…

Making its return this month is "No Mow May." This initiative aims to promote the health of bees and other pollinators in Michigan. Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti's city councils unanimously voted to support the No Mow May initiative, which would allow residents to let their lawns grow between 6 to 12 inches this month.
The cities will suspend enforcement of local regulations mandating lawns be cut before they grow over a foot tall for the month of May. According to the resolution passed on May 2, the council is encouraging property owners to not cross the threshold of one foot.
What happens when No Mow May is over?
While some city council members are on board, others shared their concerns. "How do we recover from that when people have 18-inch grass in their yard, and as soon as May is over and they don't cut the grass it gets enforced?" Council Member Steve Wilcoxen asked as the resolution was discussed.
Wilcoxen said he was on board with the benefits for pollinators, but wondered if encouraging taller grass might result in more fossil fuel-related emissions when residents end up reining in lawns with power tools at the end of the month.
However, the city passed the No Mow May with a slight change from the previous year.
This year, Ann Arbor officials have reworked the No Mow May messaging with a "Pollinator-Aware Yard Care" campaign. It encourages property owners to adopt year-round practices to support native pollinators. This includes avoiding chemical lawn applications, leaving fall leaves on the ground, and reducing yard space dedicated to turf grass.
No Mow May stems from the popularization of it in the United Kingdom. Other parts of Washtenaw County have taken the same approach and have been sanctioned to some extent by Michigan cities like Ann Arbor, Jackson, East Lansing, and Royal Oak.
5 Plants That Will Make Your Garden Smell
Plants don't always give off beautiful floral aromas, scents, and smells. There are plants that give off unpleasant smells that could stink up your garden. Most plants give off produce scents to lure in pollinators and repel predators.
Bees and butterflies are drawn to your garden by sweet scents from fragrant flowers. Plants with foul odors smell this way to attract flies and beetles which normally lay their eggs in feces and rotting materials.
With the gardening season around the corner, you may want to consider avoiding putting these plants in your garden.
Here are five plants that can smell up your garden.
Crown Imperial Plants

The flowers have a potent, musky scent almost like a skunk, which deters rodents and voles as well as squirrels and deer from the garden. Crown imperial plants are native to Asia and the Middle East. They come in These flowers come in shades of red, orange, and yellow.
Stinking Corpse Lily

The flower has a large central opening surrounded by petal-like structures and can grow huge, weighing up to 24 pounds. Also known as the rafflesia arnoldii, which smells and even looks like a rotting carcass.
Carrion Flower

These flowers are often pollinated by flies and other insects that are attracted to the smell of decay. The most common odors describe it as smelling like a rotting animal, a dead mouse, foul, and sulfur-like during flowering.
Skunk Cabbage

Skunk Cabbages get their name from the fact they produce a smell of rotting meat or skunk when their leaves are bruised or crushed. While the smell may be unpleasant, the odor can help keep pests away and attract beneficial pollinators including bees and butterflies.
Corpse Flower

This flower is far from sweet. The United States Botanic Garden says its the worst-smelling flower in the world. Also known as the titan arum, some people compare its smell to a stinking corpse or rotting flesh.