Below is a list of the eco-friendly gardens that are participating this year:
Cloverdale
Hummingbird Haven
Corte Madera
Wildlife Oasis – Neil Cummins Native Habitat Garden
Cotati
Color in Cotati
PageRefuge
Novato
Miles McKay Meditation Garden
Lemons and Lavender Homestead
Home Ground Habitats
Oaks and Sages
Petaluma
New Oak Woodland
Garden Sense Waterwise Garden
San Anselmo
Drought Resistant Garden
San Rafael
Planting for the Future
Santa Rosa
HOA Lawn Conversion
A Garden for Wildlife
Laguna Environmental Center Native Plant Demonstration Garden
Matanzas Creek Natives
Totally Unexpected Food Forest
PageRefuge's plants are cooperating big time to provide visitors with a wide range of colorful displays. Seems to me that each will certainly find something they will like to plant in their own gardens.
Viola tricolor (Johnny jump up) The flowers are a tasty addition to lettuce salads. |
I must admit this is my all time flower! The flowering is prolific and to me looks so cheerful. When I scattered a few (well, I guess there were far more that a few!) in the large clay pots sitting on the back patio, I noticed as I prepared the pots for planting tomato plants in them that they were FULL of Johnny jump up. On a flower planting day recently I dug them all up and transplanted them in the "milkweed bed" beneath the living room windows. To my astonishment when I had planted them all, the bed was covered. What a delight to behold!
Lonicera hispidula (Honeysuckle, aka Hairy honeysuckle)
Calylophus drum mondianus (Sundrops)
While living in Santa Fe, I fell in love with Sundrops. Luckily, when this property become mine to relandscape, it came with two of the above! I merely moved them so they would be together in a spot to my liking.
In New Mexico several varieties of Sundrops are indigenous. Along the front where the sidewalk curved, the two pictured below were planted after I purchased three of each from Plants of the Southwest:
Fendler’s sundrops (Calylophus hartwegii fendleri)
Calylophus drum mondianus (Sundrops)
While living in Santa Fe, I fell in love with Sundrops. Luckily, when this property become mine to relandscape, it came with two of the above! I merely moved them so they would be together in a spot to my liking.
In New Mexico several varieties of Sundrops are indigenous. Along the front where the sidewalk curved, the two pictured below were planted after I purchased three of each from Plants of the Southwest:
Fendler’s sundrops (Calylophus hartwegii fendleri) |
When the sun shines onto these clumps of grass planted near the driveway and road, shimmery is such an appropriate adjective! I had created a similar situation at MuRefuge. My goal when I planted grasses I had sprouted from Todd planters into the thickly mulched front yard was exactly what now exists. Often I am so pleasantly surprised with the result. Tanis shared she has planted these grasses in her garden but they did not flourish. This reminds me that we live in so many microclimates here in Northern California. Each possess conditions so different from one another.
Stipa pulchra (Purple needlegrass) |
Lepechinia fragrans ‘El Tigre’ (Pitcher sage) |
The above plant was mentioned in an article I was reading . The pictures and description intrigued me so I checked around and found two plants for sale. I planted one in the front and the other in the back. I was so excited when I noticed the one in the back (featured in the picture above) was flowering. The flowers have a delicious smell and attractive to pollinators as well.
As I walk about surveying the readiness of PageRefuge's debut, I have a
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