The places where we live are mostly artificial constructs.
Those of us in urban/suburban areas are living in an environment of our own
making. Someone cleared the land enough to build a house on it and the plants
that we’ve chosen to invite into this space were—for the most part—our choices.
I hope you’ve chosen native plants, as
much as 70% if you can, either in what you planted or what you chose
to keep. But you’re not done; you’re never done; just like with a garden that
uses non-native plants, things change.
As many of you have done this spring, I spent time this week
editing the garden. Sediment on the driveway had convinced the mountain mint (Pycnanthemum) that it had about 8-10
more inches of room so I reclaimed that space and potted up the extra plants. A
tall annual grass had squeezed into all the extra spaces in the front bed
(nature abhors a vacuum?) and I easily pulled much of it out so that what I really
wanted to grow would have more room.
I continue to monitor one 2x2 foot area of the lawn for a
small new weed that appeared in 2022; these last two years I’ve been
able to find and pull it before it blooms. I hope it will run out of energy eventually.
I continue to monitor and pull false hawkweed (Youngia japonica) and the ever-present stiltgrass (Microstegium vimineum), mostly in the shady areas. And while I love
the bright blooms of the native biennial butterweed (Packera glabella), I usually cut off the spent flower heads so that
it is not the only thing in my yard
every spring.
Butterweed seeks total domination! |
I’ve written before about having to occasionally remove things – like trees that have grown so large that they shade out the space at the expense of a more diverse environment. The area where the tree was removed is now a large patch of mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum), which thankfully the deer usually avoid.
Mayapple around the tree stump |
Critters are a source of delight but also frustration when they destroy plants. While deer have done damage (both eating things and causing damage from antler rub), moles and voles have too. A pair of lilies that I featured in 2022—after writing that they survived moles—were destroyed the very next year by the same critters. A friend gifted me more of them; I will be planting them in wire cages in the ground!
So enjoy your gardens and your native plants and know that—native or not—our gardens are always a work in progress for a variety of reasons. Working in the wildlife-friendly garden is always interesting and helps to bring us close to many of the small reasons we do it.