Earlier this summer Jack Kenyon traveled to the Somerset village of Drayton for The New York Times, photographing Britain's gardening rebels who've abandoned their mowers for wildflower meadows.
The photographs capture Britain's growing No Mow May movement, where suburban lawns transform into thriving ecosystems. Jack's pictures reveal the beauty of botanical chaos and an embrace of productive laziness, documenting a quiet revolution where nature reclaims manicured order.
In this corner of England, the most radical act is doing absolutely nothing.