From the Prairie to the Garden
Native species gardens are growing in popularity because they are so ecologically responsible.
Their plants are self sufficient, self-cleaning, and provide solutions for soil run-off and water management as effective as they are beautiful.
Native flowers restore habitat for the wildlife that adapted to use them for food and shelter, bring depleted land to a natural balance, and stabilize unstable soils.
The major selling point of native gardens is they need no maintenance: a mix of coneflowers, goldenrods, asters, bee balms, blazing stars, yarrow, poppies, milkweed, false indigo, and yes, lilies, will run itself indefinitely, blooming year after year indifferent to the whims of the weather and questionable gardening skills.
The only thing they can’t do without is full sun exposure.
Here is a small starter native garden with flowers for all seasons: cranesbills, columbines, lupines, and penstemons for spring, daisies, Formosa lilies, coreopsis, blazing stars, coneflowers, and bee balms for summer, turtleheads, obedient plants, asters, and goldenrod for the beginning of fall, and colorful pampas grasses for fall and winter interest.