@@brianhanrahan7561 Doug is our unofficial leader for the biodiversity crisis!!! He’s one of the most influential at solving the biodiversity crisis or at least driving the change needed to reverse the trend for a lot of potential extinctions.
I’ve read his books and seen other virtual presentations but it was so nice to see Dr. Tallamy in his element. It added another dimension to the talk. Also I really appreciate how positive he is. I’ve seen some speakers get a little militant and lean toward the negative end of things. While that might resonate with the indoctrinated, it is a sure fire way to push newcomers away. He’s closer to a both/and, less of an either/or speaker and he’s going to win lots of people over with that attitude. Once they understand more, they’ll naturally become as obsessed as the rest of us 😂
Hearing that the monarch butterflies are headed for extinction if we don’t do something about it literally made my heart drop. They are such beautiful butterflies and such a magical and marvelous miracle of nature. The fact that the monarch’s that migrate south every year are 3-4 generations removed from the ones that came up is truly astonishing
Dr. Tallamy is the reason I have hardly any grass in my yard. It's full of gooseberry shrubs. spicebush, new jersey tea, St. Johns wort and all big 4 prairie grasses. I research the benefits of every plant I put in my yard now, and it has to be both native to my area and offer some type of benefit to birds or insects. I'm not comfortable talking to or being around other people, but I do have signs in my yard explaining why it looks like it does and people _do_ stop to read them as they're passing by.
Yea Doug, bravo, finally "getting" the importance of native smaller plants on the ground...please have your team compare uses for these plants to so I can have some quantitative data. The native ground plants also INSULATE the ground for winter protection. Lawns could be fluffy grasslands...when I did this with my lawn (selected for all native plants) my Lepidopteran and bee populations BOOMED! Thank you, love you so much, all these many years, your friend in Nova Scotia, Marian Bell Whitcomb.
Also, when you call a plant 'unproductive', you are biased in the kinds of insects you are collecting and studying...there are likely all kinds of things happening underground, or with other invertebrates than what you are studying in those unproductive plants. Say the keystones are productive to the Lepidopterans maybe? The problem with our species is we are not good about recognizing what we don't know yet...so please be careful to assume a plant is not useful unless you are studying every aspect of the ecology. But your conclusion "diversify" is spot-on and you have done SO much to open our eyes.
Thank you Dr. Tallamy for all of your work and educating us on the importance of natives. It is fascinating and I am incorporating all of this information as I plan my landscaping.
Loved this one! Many of Dr. Tallamy's points sunk in with me for the first time like never before. Such as only certain native plants benefit our specialist pollinators...and absolutely nothing else. Let that sink in for a minute!
So interesting to see the University of Delaware garden and especially to hear about the doctoral student's research on groundcovers under trees! Can't wait to read about her conclusions. Thank goodness we have Dr. Tallamy and thank you so much Lourdes!! :)
THANK YOU, DR. DOUGLAS W,. TALLAMY, FOR YOUR EYE-OPENING, EXCELLENT BOOKS, EXPLAINING THE BASIC, VITAL COMPONENTS, OF THE "FOOD WEB", AND WHAT WE HOMEOWNERS CAN DO TO SUBSTANTIALLY IMPROVE OUR ECOLOGICAL INTERACTIONS WITH IT ALL!!! "BRAVO!!!" ...YOU ARE OUR "HERO!!!"
This was such a fabulous episode! Love Dr. Tallamy's work, and he never disappoints when sharing information. Thank you so much for your wonderful content on gardening with native plants 😊
I’m still using wood chips for paths in addition to lawn paths. I use layers of newspaper to prevent weeds coming through. A good problem I have is clustered mountain mint growing into the path from the side. It’s easy to pull up and plant in other areas. I’ve planted some at our neighbors, friends and local park overrun by invasive plants. A wood chip bed under a tree is a great way for birds to drop serviceberry and dogwood seeds. Each year I dig up or cut back oak trees, serviceberry or dogwood trees. All free! Love your videos. My yard reflects your teachings. And because I’m near a heavily walked street others are catching the idea!
Thank you @NativePlantChannel for creating such a fun and educational video, and thank you Dr. Tallamy for teaching and inspiring so many to use more ecologically beneficial landscaping practices!
Thank you! I'm converting my landscape for the preservation of pollinators. The butterflies, humming birds, all birds, so many bees, praying mantice, centipedes, squirrels, just wildlife, seem most appreciative. Joy, joy, joy!
Love his approach to conversations about natives and ecosystem interactions! And excited that he's encouraging a new generation of habitat landscapers! ❣
I heard you speak at Wabash college yesterday February 13, 2023. Very informative. I live in Crawfordsville, Indiana and three of my neighbors are single women who are aged 80 to 94 years. They have the best native gardens that attract insects, and hummingbirds among other birds. I am also lucky to be close to lots of Indiana State parks. These will bloom by the end of March. Ephemeral Virginia Blue Bonnet will cover the sides of our local creek
Thank you Lourdes for bringing us this video. Doug Tallamy must be one of the most generous experts. Always sharing his time and expertise to all of, can I say it?, Fans!!!
Not a gardener here. Bought a 5 acre home in Virginia a couple years ago. Bush hogged 3.5 acres and left the rest undisturbed as it has been obviously for decades. Have focused so far on cutting vines (less grapes) and tree repair with a mind to keeping all trees, removing old farm fencing and equipment and trash. Now have a sloped, wooded streambed and a transitional field with decades of old growth pasture grass and dead vines laying around among dead trees as this area gets wind swept and has moist soil. Added to that, it has uneven terrain and sloping down to the neighbor's perfectly manicured lawn. I have opened it up considerably but am now at a junction point. New neighbors have arrived and are pressuring me to make it into a lawn. It has never been a lawn and covenants only require us to mow all lawns.... so I think I have legal grounds to resist. Thankfully we have no HOA. I'd like to mow with a scythe once a year and keep a path open to maintain my newly installed fenceline (to stop the neighbors from claiming it). I hate to plant a gazillion plants in there and see them fail. At the same time, I think just letting it grow will offend the new neighbors even though the bought the house next doo r when the vegetation looked even more dense than it does now. We have many forms of wildlife, butterflies, owls, deer, woodpeckers, groundhogs (I love them), foxes, skunks all in this little 1.5 acre area. My local Audubon at Home rep dismissed me entirely.
I hope you managed to put in some prairie flowers and plants along parts of the fence to act as a pretty screen until you figure out what the space is suitable for. Good luck!
Thanks so much for this presentation. As a professional landscaper in the Delmarva region, I get very frustrated with the conventional practices of my sector. I hope more people watch this video and move towards a more ecological gardens. That will make landscape companies be more aware of natives
We have a lot of spotted horsemint/bee balm that grows wild and literally hum with pollinators. We do like our busy bumbles. The neighbor lost his honeybees two years in a row and I started noticing an increasing number of them and he just said some returned to the hives👏🏼👏🏼. He will leave the hives out this winter and hopefully they stay. WI is considering naming the monarch as state butterfly. I myself like the azure butterfly best. Such beautiful blue, tiny and delicate markings.
There’s no eco landscapers willing to come out to the valley. They are all Bay Area people. I’m doing it all myself, learning as I go. Planting native oaks are 80-90% of what is needed, but I also planted some toyon and sage.
Thank you for taking the time to make this video and share your expertise. I am just getting started and appreciate all of the information provided. I have begun identifying all of the trees and shrubs in my yard and cannot believe how few are native or “contributors.” I am excited and eager to begin the transition.
I have really learned SO MUCH from this segment! Thank you from Californis, Were inland and zone 9 B. I have been doing California natives for 4 years now ans planting more and more natives in our acre. Thank you again. Our motto : If you plant it , Theu WILL COME 🦋🐛🐞🪲🐝
This is a fantastic video! I learned so much from this, and the garden featured here is gorgeous, too. Wonderful garden layers and habitat all in one place. 😊
Nice of you to cater to the conformists of cultural norms, the new earth honors the beauty of natural and wild, that is the new cultural norm!!!! Have you done, or can you do a video containing knowledge about avoiding lawn care products that use chemicals in herbicides and pesticides? Thanks for your wonderful video and knowledge!!!
Thank you so much for the time you put into these videos. It’s great to see Dr. Tallamy in this venue versus the Zoom-PowerPoint videos (which have been great as well), Pete in Wilmington, DE. Ps. Loved your Mt Cuba two-part video as well!
We have a prolific organic stream side pollinator oasis. Many frog, aquatic, and bird species live/reproduce here as well. 2022 was a record year despite summer drought by having the ability to pump 15,000 plus gallons per week from the stream.
I agree with the comments here, this video is great. Keep some grass to make them think you understand the culture…and easier to convince them. I conviced my wife to plant a native meadow i front of our house (where it’s the most sunny). I’m currently killing the grass with carboard. Soon i will plant the seed mix from OSC : cottage country native mix (a blend of native flowers, and native weeds). I believe the weed will feed the birds and assist the flowers during the first 5 years of growth. But my birds are well fed, i make sure the birdfeeder is alwyas full. The flowers will then help the pollinators. It’s a little gesture. Everybody should have a meadow or some native plants in their yard. A little and beautiful gesture. That mean a lot and an important contribution.
15:49 Love Joe Pye. I have straight species Eupatorium purpureum and it’s a massive 6 ft tall plant - makes my neighbors very nervous. They asked me twice ( I think they forgot that they’ve asked me last year already) if I know what is growing in my yard… 😅😆
Doug Tallamy and his associate share such great information in this video about how to create a home grown garden beneficial to our insect and bird friends!
Diervilla lonicera is a fantastic plant that is ridiculously underused! It’s probably my favorite low shrub for shade to part shade areas in the northeast.
Unfortunately here in southern California where almost everyone has a lawn, even clover lawns require watering pretty much every day in the summer. Actually not just the summer but all year-round. Lawns just make no sense out here in the semi-arid west.
Is there a way to get a list of plants or a schedule for a certain area? For example, if I'm in the American southeast in 8a with a mix of part sun and full sun, is it possible to find a list of native plants to stagger for a continual bloom from spring to fall? Possibly a list along the lines of "have at least one of the following 5 for early spring, any number from this list for late spring.,, ", etc? It might help fill gaps between blooms and ensure a continual supply.
Thoughts on American Bittersweet? Google has many different opinions. Long, vining plant with beautiful small purple flowers that have a yellow center. In the fall they develop bright red berries that tend to last into the winter. Grows upright unless there’s nothing to grow up and then it makes a dense mat on the ground. So if that’s a good enough description please tell me….friend or foe?
Start small and by taking a walk in a local natural area with a field guide. Try and find a local nursery that sells native plants and start growing a few in a small area of your yard.
Watching this video a third time. One thing I noticed, how come all the talk is on perennials and nobody talks about annuals as nectar plants or as host plants or what roles annuals play. Therefore I really don’t know if annuals are good or not. I do know zinnias and gomphrenas and fennel are my busiest plants for butterflies, skippers, bees, wasps, moths and hummingbirds and praying mantis must realize this too because they lay in wait on zinnias especially.can you help with annuals? Also, my fennel has more catilpillars than my milkweed or my bluestem or coneflowers and black eyed susan
Dr. Tallamy mentions that ecological landscapers are in need and that it can be learned in a relatively short period of time. Where does one go to receive this training? I'd love to learn.
I think connecting with local chapters of groups like Deep Roots, Wild Ones, etc are some names of ones in Kansas City. These and native plant nurseries likely have some specialists that have degrees in botany or horticulture or conservation and likely know other professionals in the field. Asking them what sorts of career opportunities would be a great start I imagine. Once one has some years under their belt with wise professionals I imagine job opportunities as consultants with municipalities and corporate landscapes and housing developments are endless.
I’ve seen a lot of tent caterpillars kept coming back every year to a black cherry tree in the place I lived before. From my observation, not much birds seemed eating them. Is letting tent caterpillars taking over a tree like that still ecologically beneficial? Even my chickens didn’t care about these caterpillars when they are on ground…
Think of the 60% of the US that is private land. Now think of the potential. We'd like to see more city parks that look like the habitats we create with the colorful native plants , wildlife and fish. We motivate via beauty instead of feeling a duty. It is easier to get more people pulling in a good direction. If this topic seems overwhelming, we promise if you just start with two square feet, you will be very happy with the results. Start small and easy, then grow! By the way, if you are interested in the best of landscapes, searh for a biologist or botanist. The landscape industry often uses a very narrow palette of species to keep things simple. Our UA-cam page will show the potential beauty.
A Great video. Thanks. The only concern I have about letting things grow wild is that I already have voles that destroy a lot of my plants and if I let things go wild then there will be even more voles. Any ideas on how to get rid of voles?
Just plant more stuff and don’t pay attention to the voles. If you have garter snakes or black racers they may help. Otherwise let nature take care of things at her own pace. Just keep adding natives.
Something that I think is native and I had a volunteer in my yard and I would like to know if it has a benefit is Polk/poke weed or plant. Grows tall has blooms and berries in the fall.
Local Facebook groups for me have been a gold mine of information as well as folks willing to share seeds or offer divided plants. Their is so much knowledge in our communities. Thankful for communicators like Dr. Tallamy to give us clear info.
Brilliant! I am ashamed to admit I pulled out Milkweed this summer because it was covered in Aphids. I had never seen so many Aphids on one plant. Any ideas what caused the proliferation on Swamp Milkweed (Asclepias incarnata.) What can I do to prevent this next year? So much appreciation. Thank you.
That's the food source of the lady bugs that will come in. My swamp milkweed had mins of aphids and after a week or two I hardly saw any. Let nature happen. 😊
Thank you. I embrace you notion to let nature happen. If they aren't gone after a couple weeks as in your case, then I just need to leave them? Mistakenly, I pulled the milkweed plant out that was covered in aphids. I want to support ladybugs. The Native Nursery mentioned using Neem Oil ? But I know this isn't always a win-win.@@alexnichols8262
You need to add Doug's info in the title so that when people search for videos by him they can find it, thanks!!
Thanks for the tip!
You just seem to think you need a leader
@@brianhanrahan7561 Doug is our unofficial leader for the biodiversity crisis!!! He’s one of the most influential at solving the biodiversity crisis or at least driving the change needed to reverse the trend for a lot of potential extinctions.
@@allen3784
You think your leader will.preserve you from extinction?
And you claim he is " our unofficial leader"
Who is this group you speak for?
What is his name?
I’ve read his books and seen other virtual presentations but it was so nice to see Dr. Tallamy in his element. It added another dimension to the talk. Also I really appreciate how positive he is. I’ve seen some speakers get a little militant and lean toward the negative end of things. While that might resonate with the indoctrinated, it is a sure fire way to push newcomers away. He’s closer to a both/and, less of an either/or speaker and he’s going to win lots of people over with that attitude. Once they understand more, they’ll naturally become as obsessed as the rest of us 😂
Dr. Tallamy certainly has influenced multitudes of gardeners throughout the country!
This is amazing! This should be required watching for all Americans! Thank you so much for your research!
I couldn't agree more! Every high schooler needs this course to become a more responsible adult! 🌿🐛
@@carol1derful Absolutely!
@@carol1derful Every child should be taught about the habitats in their state, the history, and how all these species interact with each other
Not just Americans, I’m watching near Niagara Falls, Canada. These common sense practices help all of us who want to protect wildlife!
Hearing that the monarch butterflies are headed for extinction if we don’t do something about it literally made my heart drop. They are such beautiful butterflies and such a magical and marvelous miracle of nature. The fact that the monarch’s that migrate south every year are 3-4 generations removed from the ones that came up is truly astonishing
I agree, the monarch migration is an amazing phenomenon!
Dr. Tallamy is the reason I have hardly any grass in my yard. It's full of gooseberry shrubs. spicebush, new jersey tea, St. Johns wort and all big 4 prairie grasses. I research the benefits of every plant I put in my yard now, and it has to be both native to my area and offer some type of benefit to birds or insects. I'm not comfortable talking to or being around other people, but I do have signs in my yard explaining why it looks like it does and people _do_ stop to read them as they're passing by.
Thanks for the reminder of St. John’s wort. I’ll move mine to a more appreciable location. Right now it’s crowded in the backyard. 🌸
Great to see Doug in the field talking about these plants. The webinar I saw him on a couple years ago started me on my native plant journey.
Thanks for sharing!
Dr. Tallamy does a great job of explaining simple practices that private landowners can do to help the local ecology
"YOUR yard is an important part of conservation." Dr Tallamy
Awesome quote! Thanks for this informative video!
I live the quote- lawns are area rugs- not wall to wall carpet :)
Yea Doug, bravo, finally "getting" the importance of native smaller plants on the ground...please have your team compare uses for these plants to so I can have some quantitative data. The native ground plants also INSULATE the ground for winter protection. Lawns could be fluffy grasslands...when I did this with my lawn (selected for all native plants) my Lepidopteran and bee populations BOOMED! Thank you, love you so much, all these many years, your friend in Nova Scotia, Marian Bell Whitcomb.
Also, when you call a plant 'unproductive', you are biased in the kinds of insects you are collecting and studying...there are likely all kinds of things happening underground, or with other invertebrates than what you are studying in those unproductive plants. Say the keystones are productive to the Lepidopterans maybe?
The problem with our species is we are not good about recognizing what we don't know yet...so please be careful to assume a plant is not useful unless you are studying every aspect of the ecology. But your conclusion "diversify" is spot-on and you have done SO much to open our eyes.
Thank you Dr. Tallamy for all of your work and educating us on the importance of natives. It is fascinating and I am incorporating all of this information as I plan my landscaping.
Loved this one! Many of Dr. Tallamy's points sunk in with me for the first time like never before. Such as only certain native plants benefit our specialist pollinators...and absolutely nothing else. Let that sink in for a minute!
Also, for me, the importance of caterpillars!
the person on the left at the beginning of the video just staring at the ground!!!!lol
🍄🍄🍄
It was so weird - couldn’t they ask her to move before shooting there??! 😅
So interesting to see the University of Delaware garden and especially to hear about the doctoral student's research on groundcovers under trees! Can't wait to read about her conclusions. Thank goodness we have Dr. Tallamy and thank you so much Lourdes!! :)
Dr. Tallamy is so influential!
THANK YOU, DR. DOUGLAS W,. TALLAMY, FOR YOUR EYE-OPENING, EXCELLENT BOOKS, EXPLAINING THE BASIC, VITAL COMPONENTS, OF THE "FOOD WEB", AND WHAT WE HOMEOWNERS CAN DO TO SUBSTANTIALLY IMPROVE OUR ECOLOGICAL INTERACTIONS WITH IT ALL!!! "BRAVO!!!" ...YOU ARE OUR "HERO!!!"
This was such a fabulous episode! Love Dr. Tallamy's work, and he never disappoints when sharing information. Thank you so much for your wonderful content on gardening with native plants 😊
Thanks for commenting, so glad you enjoyed it!
I’m still using wood chips for paths in addition to lawn paths. I use layers of newspaper to prevent weeds coming through. A good problem I have is clustered mountain mint growing into the path from the side. It’s easy to pull up and plant in other areas. I’ve planted some at our neighbors, friends and local park overrun by invasive plants.
A wood chip bed under a tree is a great way for birds to drop serviceberry and dogwood seeds. Each year I dig up or cut back oak trees, serviceberry or dogwood trees. All free! Love your videos. My yard reflects your teachings. And because I’m near a heavily walked street others are catching the idea!
Oh my gosh! What an incredible info filled video! FANTASTIC 👍🏻
Thank you @NativePlantChannel for creating such a fun and educational video, and thank you Dr. Tallamy for teaching and inspiring so many to use more ecologically beneficial landscaping practices!
Thank you! I'm converting my landscape for the preservation of pollinators. The butterflies, humming birds, all birds, so many bees, praying mantice, centipedes, squirrels, just wildlife, seem most appreciative. Joy, joy, joy!
Love his approach to conversations about natives and ecosystem interactions! And excited that he's encouraging a new generation of habitat landscapers! ❣
Thank you so much for spreading this message
Thanks for commenting, so glad you enjoyed it!
I heard you speak at Wabash college yesterday February 13, 2023. Very informative. I live in Crawfordsville, Indiana and three of my neighbors are single women who are aged 80 to 94 years. They have the best native gardens that attract insects, and hummingbirds among other birds. I am also lucky to be close to lots of Indiana State parks. These will bloom by the end of March. Ephemeral Virginia Blue Bonnet will cover the sides of our local creek
This video is really really incredible, i wish it was standard to show this in American schools
This is the BEST gardening video I have ever seen! Thank you, Dr. Tallamy!
Saludos cordiales amiga apoyando a tú canal
Such a jam packed episode of information. Learned so much. I hope to hear about results of ground cover under trees.
Thanks for commenting, the research will take time.
Thank you Lourdes for bringing us this video. Doug Tallamy must be one of the most generous experts. Always sharing his time and expertise to all of, can I say it?, Fans!!!
brillant man
I want to become an ecological native plant landscaper
I should have gotten a degree to be a landscape architect.
Not a gardener here. Bought a 5 acre home in Virginia a couple years ago. Bush hogged 3.5 acres and left the rest undisturbed as it has been obviously for decades. Have focused so far on cutting vines (less grapes) and tree repair with a mind to keeping all trees, removing old farm fencing and equipment and trash. Now have a sloped, wooded streambed and a transitional field with decades of old growth pasture grass and dead vines laying around among dead trees as this area gets wind swept and has moist soil. Added to that, it has uneven terrain and sloping down to the neighbor's perfectly manicured lawn. I have opened it up considerably but am now at a junction point. New neighbors have arrived and are pressuring me to make it into a lawn. It has never been a lawn and covenants only require us to mow all lawns.... so I think I have legal grounds to resist. Thankfully we have no HOA. I'd like to mow with a scythe once a year and keep a path open to maintain my newly installed fenceline (to stop the neighbors from claiming it). I hate to plant a gazillion plants in there and see them fail. At the same time, I think just letting it grow will offend the new neighbors even though the bought the house next doo r when the vegetation looked even more dense than it does now. We have many forms of wildlife, butterflies, owls, deer, woodpeckers, groundhogs (I love them), foxes, skunks all in this little 1.5 acre area. My local Audubon at Home rep dismissed me entirely.
I hope you managed to put in some prairie flowers and plants along parts of the fence to act as a pretty screen until you figure out what the space is suitable for. Good luck!
Thanks so much for this presentation. As a professional landscaper in the Delmarva region, I get very frustrated with the conventional practices of my sector. I hope more people watch this video and move towards a more ecological gardens. That will make landscape companies be more aware of natives
We have a lot of spotted horsemint/bee balm that grows wild and literally hum with pollinators. We do like our busy bumbles. The neighbor lost his honeybees two years in a row and I started noticing an increasing number of them and he just said some returned to the hives👏🏼👏🏼. He will leave the hives out this winter and hopefully they stay. WI is considering naming the monarch as state butterfly. I myself like the azure butterfly best. Such beautiful blue, tiny and delicate markings.
There’s no eco landscapers willing to come out to the valley. They are all Bay Area people. I’m doing it all myself, learning as I go. Planting native oaks are 80-90% of what is needed, but I also planted some toyon and sage.
Thank you for taking the time to make this video and share your expertise. I am just getting started and appreciate all of the information provided. I have begun identifying all of the trees and shrubs in my yard and cannot believe how few are native or “contributors.” I am excited and eager to begin the transition.
Thank you James for going native!
I have really learned SO MUCH from this segment! Thank you from Californis, Were inland and zone 9 B. I have been doing California natives for 4 years now ans planting more and more natives in our acre. Thank you again. Our motto : If you plant it , Theu WILL COME 🦋🐛🐞🪲🐝
What an amazing video for a gardener in the Hudson valley. Amazing channel.
Thanks for commenting, so glad you enjoyed it!
This is a fantastic video! I learned so much from this, and the garden featured here is gorgeous, too. Wonderful garden layers and habitat all in one place. 😊
Nice of you to cater to the conformists of cultural norms, the new earth honors the beauty of natural and wild, that is the new cultural norm!!!!
Have you done, or can you do a video containing knowledge about avoiding lawn care products that use chemicals in herbicides and pesticides?
Thanks for your wonderful video and knowledge!!!
This was absolutely inspiring
Thank you so much for the time you put into these videos. It’s great to see Dr. Tallamy in this venue versus the Zoom-PowerPoint videos (which have been great as well), Pete in Wilmington, DE. Ps. Loved your Mt Cuba two-part video as well!
Thanks, Pete! So glad you are enjoying the content!
Thank you for creating a video full of great information. I will be rewatching it multiple times. Thank you
Thanks for commenting, so glad you enjoyed it! My goal is to provide as much useful information in the shortest time possible.
Great episode! I'll definitely share this on my socials!! 👏👏👏
Thanks!
🐝🐝🐝🌱 thanks for the explanation. Love your content.
Please leave plant names on a little longer if possible. Great work!
Those Joe Pye are MASSIVE!
Wonderful! Thank you!
We have a prolific organic stream side pollinator oasis. Many frog, aquatic, and bird species live/reproduce here as well. 2022 was a record year despite summer drought by having the ability to pump 15,000 plus gallons per week from the stream.
So grateful i was introduced to Doug today!!!! Much work to be done ✊🏽💚🫡🌲🌲🌲🌲 lets save PachaMama❣️❣️❣️
This is such a great video! Thanks for doing the tour and interview. Definitely one of my favourites.
Thanks for commenting, so glad you enjoyed it! Dr. Tallamy is a wealth of knowledge!
Watching again. ❤
I agree with the comments here, this video is great.
Keep some grass to make them think you understand the culture…and easier to convince them.
I conviced my wife to plant a native meadow i front of our house (where it’s the most sunny). I’m currently killing the grass with carboard.
Soon i will plant the seed mix from OSC : cottage country native mix (a blend of native flowers, and native weeds). I believe the weed will feed the birds and assist the flowers during the first 5 years of growth. But my birds are well fed, i make sure the birdfeeder is alwyas full.
The flowers will then help the pollinators. It’s a little gesture. Everybody should have a meadow or some native plants in their yard. A little and beautiful gesture. That mean a lot and an important contribution.
I’m a big fan of Doug. I’m joining from Ontario. ❤
15:49 Love Joe Pye. I have straight species Eupatorium purpureum and it’s a massive 6 ft tall plant - makes my neighbors very nervous. They asked me twice ( I think they forgot that they’ve asked me last year already) if I know what is growing in my yard… 😅😆
Thanks so much for sharing all this wonderful information!
I enjoyed this! Thank you.
Thanks for commenting, so glad you enjoyed it! Keep planting those natives!
Doug Tallamy and his associate share such great information in this video about how to create a home grown garden beneficial to our insect and bird friends!
Alright. This dude gets it
very important information!!! THANK YOU
Fantastic video! I learned so much and am going to read up on "keystone species."
I learned many new things from this video - thank you!
I live in the pacific northwest but you're knowledge is so useful thank you. Horticulture and Natural Resources major here in Oregon.
I have a Diervilla Lonicera on order from prairie moon nursery for fall. Thank you for your clarification!! I’ve also order more goldenrod and asters.
Thank you for planting natives! Goldenrods and asters should be in every garden!
Diervilla lonicera is a fantastic plant that is ridiculously underused! It’s probably my favorite low shrub for shade to part shade areas in the northeast.
Any thoughts on boneset?
Wow, FANTASTIC video!!! ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Wonderful video!
Excellent, easy to understand video. Thank you!
Really eager for the comback of Doug Tallamy
You teaching the course
I leave large patches of milkweed but havent seen more than a few the past 4-5 years
Thank you
A clover lawn is not only beautiful and feeds bees, it's also low-mow.
Unfortunately here in southern California where almost everyone has a lawn, even clover lawns require watering pretty much every day in the summer. Actually not just the summer but all year-round. Lawns just make no sense out here in the semi-arid west.
Excellent info.
Beautiful
Is there a way to get a list of plants or a schedule for a certain area? For example, if I'm in the American southeast in 8a with a mix of part sun and full sun, is it possible to find a list of native plants to stagger for a continual bloom from spring to fall? Possibly a list along the lines of "have at least one of the following 5 for early spring, any number from this list for late spring.,, ", etc? It might help fill gaps between blooms and ensure a continual supply.
Wonderful video, thank you so much. But I was hoping to hear what are the best ground covers , well, maybe you have it in a different video?
Great.
any ideas on how to deal with pests like black legged and other ticks? will other birds take care of those?
Amazing video! Thank you
Thanks for commenting, so glad you enjoyed it! Keep adding natives!
Great vid
Thoughts on American Bittersweet? Google has many different opinions. Long, vining plant with beautiful small purple flowers that have a yellow center. In the fall they develop bright red berries that tend to last into the winter. Grows upright unless there’s nothing to grow up and then it makes a dense mat on the ground. So if that’s a good enough description please tell me….friend or foe?
This is overwhelming...
Start small and by taking a walk in a local natural area with a field guide. Try and find a local nursery that sells native plants and start growing a few in a small area of your yard.
This is great. I have a large area surrounded by black walnut that I want to re-wild. Any thoughts on what native plants I can add there?
I understand that our native persimmon tree does well with black walnut.
Watching this video a third time. One thing I noticed, how come all the talk is on perennials and nobody talks about annuals as nectar plants or as host plants or what roles annuals play. Therefore I really don’t know if annuals are good or not. I do know zinnias and gomphrenas and fennel are my busiest plants for butterflies, skippers, bees, wasps, moths and hummingbirds and praying mantis must realize this too because they lay in wait on zinnias especially.can you help with annuals?
Also, my fennel has more catilpillars than my milkweed or my bluestem or coneflowers and black eyed susan
@Franco Stacy why do you need anybody to tell you what you've already seen with your own eyes. Caterpillars also love parsley around Autumn.
Dr. Tallamy mentions that ecological landscapers are in need and that it can be learned in a relatively short period of time. Where does one go to receive this training? I'd love to learn.
He mentioned an ecological gardening as a career. I’m extremely interested. How would one go about picking up the knowledge to begin doing this?
I think connecting with local chapters of groups like Deep Roots, Wild Ones, etc are some names of ones in Kansas City. These and native plant nurseries likely have some specialists that have degrees in botany or horticulture or conservation and likely know other professionals in the field. Asking them what sorts of career opportunities would be a great start I imagine.
Once one has some years under their belt with wise professionals I imagine job opportunities as consultants with municipalities and corporate landscapes and housing developments are endless.
Great video ! Which native viburnum is highlighted in this video?
Can you recommend an ecological landscaper in Chicago area?
I would love to hire an ecological landscaper.
Where would a person get the training to do ecological landscaping?
Maybe i missed it but native to where?? Thats kind an important thing to put in the title and/or description re where this place is
I’ve seen a lot of tent caterpillars kept coming back every year to a black cherry tree in the place I lived before. From my observation, not much birds seemed eating them. Is letting tent caterpillars taking over a tree like that still ecologically beneficial? Even my chickens didn’t care about these caterpillars when they are on ground…
What shade providing tree would one plant 10 feet from septic tank?
Think of the 60% of the US that is private land. Now think of the potential. We'd like to see more city parks that look like the habitats we create with the colorful native plants , wildlife and fish. We motivate via beauty instead of feeling a duty. It is easier to get more people pulling in a good direction. If this topic seems overwhelming, we promise if you just start with two square feet, you will be very happy with the results. Start small and easy, then grow! By the way, if you are interested in the best of landscapes, searh for a biologist or botanist. The landscape industry often uses a very narrow palette of species to keep things simple. Our UA-cam page will show the potential beauty.
In addition to not planting by septics. Do not plant willow near houses, foundations, fish ponds & most of all any water pipes.
If one has a small yard, is it better to plant a lot of plants of few genus/sp. or a lot of different genus/sp.?
A Great video. Thanks. The only concern I have about letting things grow wild is that I already have voles that destroy a lot of my plants and if I let things go wild then there will be even more voles. Any ideas on how to get rid of voles?
Just plant more stuff and don’t pay attention to the voles. If you have garter snakes or black racers they may help. Otherwise let nature take care of things at her own pace. Just keep adding natives.
Something that I think is native and I had a volunteer in my yard and I would like to know if it has a benefit is Polk/poke weed or plant. Grows tall has blooms and berries in the fall.
See if this is the plant you are referring to, if so, its berries are valuable to birds. www.inaturalist.org/guide_taxa/528789
How do I find info on different native ground covers
Local Facebook groups for me have been a gold mine of information as well as folks willing to share seeds or offer divided plants. Their is so much knowledge in our communities. Thankful for communicators like Dr. Tallamy to give us clear info.
Brilliant! I am ashamed to admit I pulled out Milkweed this summer because it was covered in Aphids. I had never seen so many Aphids on one plant. Any ideas what caused the proliferation on Swamp Milkweed (Asclepias incarnata.) What can I do to prevent this next year? So much appreciation. Thank you.
That's the food source of the lady bugs that will come in. My swamp milkweed had mins of aphids and after a week or two I hardly saw any. Let nature happen. 😊
Thank you. I embrace you notion to let nature happen. If they aren't gone after a couple weeks as in your case, then I just need to leave them? Mistakenly, I pulled the milkweed plant out that was covered in aphids. I want to support ladybugs. The Native Nursery mentioned using Neem Oil ? But I know this isn't always a win-win.@@alexnichols8262
What if I don’t have a lawn?
Buckets on front steps, containers hanging from the windows.
No i have a yard just no grass. I have a lot of natives growing just don’t know how to design it