Definitely great point about making it look good for the neighbors. also entices the neighbors to start their own little garden patch, and i always give plants to the neighbors, they always say yes to free plants
I agree with others that this was one of the best presentations on do's and don'ts for establishing and maintaining a native plant yard. Thank you so much! I'm going to keep the link for this video to come back to time and time again
This was the best native plant presentation I've listened to. Since I'm still in the planning stages, this has definitely changed my selection of plants. Thank you.
This was one of the most insightful and practical native planting presentations I've seen. I was on the verge of making many of these mistakes. Even the professionals who are not deeply educated about natives had me going in the wrong direction. Where can I get a good native plant design that bears all of this in mind?
I was thinking about planting bearberry too but wasn't sure if I was too far south.. But I'm in SW Ontario so if it grows for you in NC I guess I'm good to go! I have a sandy-soiled front lawn that waffles between green with moss to brown with duck grass. 😂
Good presentation. Your plants are probably just getting a lot of nitrogen and growing vigorously because of the catalpa tree being a Legume. The mulch would probably be like a 1/1/1 fert and slow. Mulch holds moisture and the microbes probably thrived and helped nitrogen fixation of your catalpa. Just a guess.
Excellent seminar, I wrote down many notes! Too bad you were rushed at the end. FYI at 55:03 you have a layout overview an I noticed you have Foxglove in the yard. Digitalis/Foxglove is not native to the US.
Me too. I just watched this yesterday (Oct 2023) and was disappointed that he didn't have time to cover how to do things the RIGHT way after giving such wonderful insight into doing things the wrong way lol. I am in SW Ontario (about 4 hrs east of Kalamazoo) so many of our native plants and annual temperatures and weather conditions would be similar I think.
Rudbeckia reseeds vociferously here. Plant one and in 3 years you will have a yard full. (SWOhio). Funny how they behave differently in different areas.
Rudbeckia hirta is a biennial but will reseed if it doesn't have much competition. Rudbeckia laciniata, Rudbeckia fulgida, Rudbeckia subtomentosa are perennials that reseed pretty vigorously as well. The various Rudbeckia cultivars are aggressive reseeding perennials as well.
This was one of the most insightful and practical native planting presentations I've seen. I was on the verge of making many of these mistakes. Even the professionals who are not deeply educated about natives had me going in the wrong direction. Where can I get a good native plant design that bears all of this in mind?
Definitely great point about making it look good for the neighbors. also entices the neighbors to start their own little garden patch, and i always give plants to the neighbors, they always say yes to free plants
One of the most useful native plant talks i've seen. Full of examples and actionable insights. Will be using this as reference for sure, thank you!!
I also totally love this. I always try to tell my clients, more plants to avoid weeds, but they always think I am planting too much . . .
I agree with others that this was one of the best presentations on do's and don'ts for establishing and maintaining a native plant yard. Thank you so much! I'm going to keep the link for this video to come back to time and time again
This was the best native plant presentation I've listened to. Since I'm still in the planning stages, this has definitely changed my selection of plants. Thank you.
One of the most practical suggestions to ensure success with Native Plants. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experiences!
I'm on the other side of the country but this was a super helpful presentation as I think about designing one of my side yards as a native habitat.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
Oops, just started a major yard renovation and already made all the mistakes! Good info, wish I had come across this earlier...
This was one of the most insightful and practical native planting presentations I've seen. I was on the verge of making many of these mistakes. Even the professionals who are not deeply educated about natives had me going in the wrong direction. Where can I get a good native plant design that bears all of this in mind?
Very helpful presentation and great photos. Thank you!
Very helpful as I’m in the prepping my area this week. Thank you.
My groundcover (NC) is uva ursi (bearberries) in my permaculture yard. I can use it for tea that is good for my kidneys. Great presentation - Thanks.
I was thinking about planting bearberry too but wasn't sure if I was too far south.. But I'm in SW Ontario so if it grows for you in NC I guess I'm good to go! I have a sandy-soiled front lawn that waffles between green with moss to brown with duck grass. 😂
Fantastic, thank you!!!🙂🙂🙂
Thank you for the information!
Good presentation. Your plants are probably just getting a lot of nitrogen and growing vigorously because of the catalpa tree being a Legume. The mulch would probably be like a 1/1/1 fert and slow. Mulch holds moisture and the microbes probably thrived and helped nitrogen fixation of your catalpa. Just a guess.
Oh man I feel your pain with tilling. Dealing with the same issue.
21:11 Well said!
Excellent seminar, I wrote down many notes! Too bad you were rushed at the end. FYI at 55:03 you have a layout overview an I noticed you have Foxglove in the yard. Digitalis/Foxglove is not native to the US.
Penstemon digitalis is most definitely a native species !!
Excellent! I wish you had been given 2 hours to speak!
Me too. I just watched this yesterday (Oct 2023) and was disappointed that he didn't have time to cover how to do things the RIGHT way after giving such wonderful insight into doing things the wrong way lol. I am in SW Ontario (about 4 hrs east of Kalamazoo) so many of our native plants and annual temperatures and weather conditions would be similar I think.
Rudbeckia reseeds vociferously here. Plant one and in 3 years you will have a yard full. (SWOhio). Funny how they behave differently in different areas.
Rudbeckia hirta is a biennial but will reseed if it doesn't have much competition. Rudbeckia laciniata, Rudbeckia fulgida, Rudbeckia subtomentosa are perennials that reseed pretty vigorously as well. The various Rudbeckia cultivars are aggressive reseeding perennials as well.
This was one of the most insightful and practical native planting presentations I've seen. I was on the verge of making many of these mistakes. Even the professionals who are not deeply educated about natives had me going in the wrong direction. Where can I get a good native plant design that bears all of this in mind?