Clover typically takes less water to survive than turf grasses and puts out lovely flowers that are pollinator friendly for a pretty good portion of the year. The kind of clover that grows in my area (Tennessee, USA) is nearly evergreen too, starting earlier in the spring and staying green later than turf grasses.
Eh, I’m not an expert but I think most trams move slow enough that they aren’t going to take out pollinators. They won’t crush them on the flowers, only risk would be when flying in the air. A decent aerodynamic deflector of some kind would probably help. The modern equivalent of a cattle guard on an old steam train.
FYI, grasses are flowering plants too. We just typically mow turfgrasses before they grow tall enough to produce them, and even when they do, the flowers themselves are typically very small.
For example, bermudagrass flowers:
Honestly, I doubt that it’d much of a problem to use things with bigger flowers – bees and such can probably get out of the way of a tram.
Of course, grasses are neither a fern nor moss. I was thinking of flowering plants that do attract pollinators, not those that make use of wind for pollination.
Clover typically takes less water to survive than turf grasses and puts out lovely flowers that are pollinator friendly for a pretty good portion of the year. The kind of clover that grows in my area (Tennessee, USA) is nearly evergreen too, starting earlier in the spring and staying green later than turf grasses.
Yet, we don’t want the pollinators to get smashed by the trams. Thus, flowering plants probably aren’t a good idea.
Eh, I’m not an expert but I think most trams move slow enough that they aren’t going to take out pollinators. They won’t crush them on the flowers, only risk would be when flying in the air. A decent aerodynamic deflector of some kind would probably help. The modern equivalent of a cattle guard on an old steam train.
I’m also not an expert, but I’ve seen a tram go slow enough that someone was trying to lick it as it passed. … Yeah, that was pretty weird…
Makes sense.
FYI, grasses are flowering plants too. We just typically mow turfgrasses before they grow tall enough to produce them, and even when they do, the flowers themselves are typically very small.
For example, bermudagrass flowers:
Honestly, I doubt that it’d much of a problem to use things with bigger flowers – bees and such can probably get out of the way of a tram.
Of course, grasses are neither a fern nor moss. I was thinking of flowering plants that do attract pollinators, not those that make use of wind for pollination.
If we run trams over grass for long enough, perhaps eventually a plant will evolve which uses the motion of a tram to spread its pollen.
Ooh that sounds nice!