What we “did” when we bought our house was … nothing. We let and watched the grass grow. This started an incredible learning journey. The first year we enjoyed waves of grass swaying in the wind, and dreamed of the beauty that was to come. Then I planted flowers in the grass to make it look like a meadow. Next year, I noticed all kinds of delightful surprises as plants other than grass started to grow. Next year we created a raingarden and seeded it with natives all while watching the grass recede and new plants growing. Then I removed the grass from a small area and planted some native plugs. All the while the rest of the yard continued the transition away from grass and towards diversity on its own. I learned about invasives, so I started removing them. I observed that the nonnative seed pressure around us was ever present and doing truly nothing would result in thistles and then a thicket and a then a forest. After that, every year I removed the invasives and now and then bought a plug or two of natives that I planted in various places. My approach is to remove the invasives and encourage the natives. Never very much work at a time. Plants are slow, I have to be just a bit faster and many disappear on their own. One delightful aspect of our experience of letting Nature return home, is how much less work it took than we thought. The diversity of life is astounding now.