Kim Frisbie| Special to the Daily News
I was delighted the other day to pass a bright sign outside a garden along the ocean proclaiming, Native Plants bring Life to this Landscape. The sign was outlined with pictures of cardinals, butterflies, coral honeysuckle, dune sunflower, gaillardia, and other native flowers, with the logo FANN, the Florida Association of Native Nurseries at the bottom. Peeking over the gate, I saw a mass of colorful natives thriving happily along the dunes. People are paying attention.
The New York City Parks Department recently jumped on the native plant bandwagon, urging the public to plant natives to help sharply declining bird and pollinator populations, which they acknowledge are in dire need of more natural space.The Parks Departments Pollinator Place Program supports birds, bugs and bees year-round by planting native gardens in city parks.Similar native gardens are springing up across the country, as people become more aware of the urgency to save our existing species, which happen to include us.
We have the all-native Pans Garden at The Preservation Foundation, and Lake Drive Park at the towns new marina hosts an enormous number of native species. The town and The Preservation Foundation are now collaborating on the exciting 18-acre Phipps Ocean Park, a visionary oasis of native plants stretching from the Atlantic Ocean to the Intracoastal Waterway. Designed by renowned architect Raymond Jungles, the park will include trails through coastal hammocks of native trees, shrubsand wildflowers, educational outdoor classroomsand beautiful vistas overlooking restored dunes and mangrove islands.
These parks play a vital role in reconnecting us with naturebut we shouldnt have to go to a park to hear birds and see butterflies. This should be a part of our everyday lives.
The tropical jungle that was once Florida has been almost entirely replaced with exotic species. Many of these are beautiful and do indeed add to the allure that is Palm Beach, but we need more native plants in the mix to establish balanced ecosystems that support essential polllinators and the birds and wildlife that depend on them.
Diversity of plant material is also crucial; monocultures created by using too much of a single species invite disease and pests. This is underscored by the overuse of Ficus benjamina hedges, which cannot survive without toxic pesticides that poison our air and pollute our water and soil. Native plants have evolved with their insect pollinators in adapting to our specific growing conditions, so they require no chemicals.Once established, native plants will literally bring life to your landscape, providing sustainable habitat for butterflies, bees and other pollinators, songbirds, hummingbirds and interesting wildlife.
There is nothing more joyful than a real, living garden, full of color, fragrance, and activity. This is a far cry from the sterile landscapes to which we have grown accustomed in Palm Beach: lifeless, chemically treated lawns surrounded by sterile, manicured ficus hedges accented with spikes of podocarpus or globes of schefflera trinette provide no environmental sustenance.
A common complaint about natives is that they are too unkempt or not formal enough, but this is not the case if they are planted correctly. Sun-loving plants wont thrive in the shade, and shade-loving plants wilt and yellow in full sun. Its just a matter of learning what to plant in your specific location.
Its also important to take size into consideration: Dont plant a shrub that will grow to 10 feet in front of a window if you want to see out. And understand the natural growing characteristics of plants: tall slender myrsine fits nicely into a shady corner while open spreading fetterbush needs more space, but makes a great hedge or accent plant.
If you want a manicured look, plenty of natives are fine with pruning, including cocoa plum, buttonwood, Simpson's stopperand red cedar. Give plants room to grow; planted too closely, they will not thrive or reach their full potential.
And it wouldnt hurt us to modify our conception of the perfect garden to include more naturalistic plantings. Its fun to experiment with new species to add variety to your landscape; the more diversity you incorporate, the more birds you will attract.
Here are some interesting, beautiful natives that will add grace, distinction and sustainability to your gardens.
Blacktorch, Erithralis fruticosa, is a beautiful accent shrub with glossy evergreen foliage and small star-shaped white flowers followed by striking clusters of shiny black berries. This does well in sun or shade and grows to 6 feet.
Snowberry, Chiococca alba, has drooping clusters of fragrant white bell- shaped flowers followed by lovely bright white berries that glisten against the glossy green foliage. This grows to 8 feet in sun or part shade.
Fetterbush, Lyonia lucida, is a sprawling evergreen shrub growing 3-5 feet, thriving in moist soils in filtered shade. Fragrant white to deep pink flowers appear in spring attracting numerous butterflies, and the fruit is loved by mockingbirds. The evergreen leaves are coppery when young.
Golden creeper, Ernodea littoralis, is a fabulous low-growing, sprawling shrub perfect as a ground cover or in a planter where its arching stems will cascade gracefully over the sides. In coastal areas it forms a spreading mat controlling sand erosion, and the small whitish-pink flowers bloom all year. Heat- and drought-tolerant, it thrives in full sun. This is a threatened species, so you will be doing yourself and the environment a big favor by planting it.
Pearlberry, Vallesia antillana, is another undemanding shrub with beautiful elliptical foliage setting off delicate clusters of milky star-shaped flowers and white, translucent pearl-like berries.This makes a lovely specimen or dense screen in sun or part shade.
White indigoberry, Randia aculeata, is a tough, slow growing evergreen shrub that's perfect for difficult sites with no irrigation. The fragrant white flowers appear year-round, and the white berries enclose an indigo blue pulp. Reaching 10 feet, this can be pruned to a smaller size. It is the larval host for the tantalus sphinx moth and provides nectar for numerous butterflies.
Finally, native plumbago, Plumbago scandens, provides delicate white star-shaped flowers year-round in sun or shade. Growing 3-4 feet, the arching stems intermingle with adjacent plants, making them appear to be blooming as well. The crushed foliage is used medicinally in the Caribbean.
Planting just a few natives will add interest and variety to your gardens, and you will love the butterflies and birds that seek out the nectar and habitat provided by their fruit and foliage. Every one of the plants Ive mentioned can be seen at Pans Garden, and I have them in my garden as well, so I can vouch for their beauty and performance.
There are hundreds of natives from which to choose:experiment with different colors, textures, sizes and shapes. And let the plants natural characteristics dictate where they will be best suited in your landscape. Then sit back and enjoy natures pageant of birds and butterflies.
Read more from the original source:
Green Gardening: Enjoy the bounties of nature that native plants bring - Palm Beach Daily News
- Designer and landscape architect appointed for country park on outskirts of Leamington - WarwickshireWorld - December 21st, 2024 [December 21st, 2024]
- Landscape architect to share her expertise - The Montana Standard - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- Vessel reopens in Hudson Yards with steel mesh netting - The Architect's Newspaper - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- Charles and Ray Eames changed the landscape of design with "just a few chairs and a house" - Dezeen - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- At Tech+ Dallas, AEC leaders convene to explore the latest tools and AI innovations in the industry - The Architect's Newspaper - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- MAD Architects disrupts Denvers burgeoning skyline with One River North, a building with an open-air canyon - The Architect's Newspaper - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- A place of collaborative conversation - Penn Today - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- AIA Board alleges coordinated campaign to discredit leadership - The Architect's Newspaper - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- LMN Architects completes the Field Arts & Events Hall in northern Washington - The Architect's Newspaper - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- Facades+ returns to Chicago on October 4 - The Architect's Newspaper - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- Jahn/ lines a residential building in Chicago with aluminum spandrels drawing interest to a glass curtain wall facade - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- HDR wraps a new research facility in Minnesota for Mayo Clinic in aluminum scrim - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Women in Carbon documents relationship between motherhood and climate change - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- August Architecture Billings Index drops again, amid an impending cut to interest rates - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- schlaich bergermann partner completes Williams Crossing pedestrian bridge over Arkansas River in Tulsa - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Perkins&Will designs student housing for UC Law San Francisco using fluted aluminum panels - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Landscape architect transforms property that was pit stop for wayward animals - Boston.com - August 4th, 2024 [August 4th, 2024]
- Bruck Elected to Prestigious American Society of Landscape Architects Council of Fellows School of Landscape ... - UF College of Design, Construction... - June 13th, 2024 [June 13th, 2024]
- 12 Long Island Interior Designers, Architects, and Landscape Designers You Need to Know - Architectural Digest - June 13th, 2024 [June 13th, 2024]
- "Outstanding" landscape architect Lynn Kinnear dies aged 64 - Dezeen - March 31st, 2024 [March 31st, 2024]
- Marco Bay, the gardens of the San Domenico Palace in Taormina - Abitare English | Architecture and Design Magazine - March 31st, 2024 [March 31st, 2024]
- Too much West Coast land deemed 'outstanding landscape architect - 1News - March 23rd, 2024 [March 23rd, 2024]
- Landscape Architect Sara Zewde Reimagines the Land at Dia Beacon, New York - ArchDaily - March 14th, 2024 [March 14th, 2024]
- Department of Landscape Architecture Celebrates 90 Years UF College of Design, Construction and Planning - UF College of Design, Construction and... - March 14th, 2024 [March 14th, 2024]
- About Our Studio - SCAPE - March 24th, 2023 [March 24th, 2023]
- On Solid Ground: 10 Top Landscape Architecture Firms in 2021 - Journal - March 24th, 2023 [March 24th, 2023]
- What's Next After the Wiggle Trend? We Asked 9 Designers for Their Predictions - Architectural Digest - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Review | The Power Of Scenery: Frederick Law Olmsted And The Origin Of National Parks - National Parks Traveler - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Obituary: Richard Rogers, pioneering architect who re-imagined the urban landscape - HeraldScotland - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Roses and thorns 12-26-21 - The Commercial Dispatch - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Most of us will first experience climate change through water - MIT Technology Review - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- FAITH: Hearts in Touch - When life takes a twist - Orange Leader - Orange Leader - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Visual art in 2021 explored big issues and didnt shy from controversy - SF Chronicle Datebook - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- 10 books we loved this year - The Spaces - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Casa S is an amoeba-shaped home on the coast of Chile - Dezeen - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- $30m secured to begin Phase I of the Arvene East project in New York - Construction Review - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Duck, Duck, Beer: What makes Stuttgart, Arkansas, the duck hunting capital of the world? - Oklahoman.com - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Julie Bargmann Is the Winner of the Inaugural Oberlander Prize; a Pritzker Prize for Landscape Architecture. - Metropolis Magazine - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Bell Bowl Prairie Proponents Have a Proposal to Save Rare Land and Allow Rockford Airport to Expand - WTTW News - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Mies van der Rohe town house with walls of glass ticks all the boxes for artists, architects - Detroit Free Press - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Why Ecology Is the Infrastructure of the Future - The Nation - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Differences of working at a practice in another part of the world - Archinect - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Moving ahead with plans for Washington Park | News, Sports, Jobs - timesobserver.com - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Princeton and Trenton are settings for latest novel by author Lauren B. Davis that explores marginalization, othering - Planet Princeton - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Peter Thiel's luxury New Zealand lodge opposed by environmental group - CNBC - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Archinect's Fellowship Watch Part II: Check out employment and academic fellowship opportunities listed on Archinect Jobs - Archinect - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Eight recommended books for those who love architecture - Creative Boom - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- City moves to expand tree-protection rules | News | Palo Alto Online | - Palo Alto Online - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- OSU's College of Engineering, Architecture and Technology announces 2021 Hall of Fame inductees and Lohmann Medal recipients - Oklahoma State... - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- A New Observatory Suspended Nearly 1,300 Feet in the Air Is Redefining New York City's Skyline - Architectural Digest - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- OMA's 'al daayan' health district in doha reimagines the future of hospitals - Designboom - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- West Lafayette Public Library to be closed in November for construction - Journal & Courier - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- WALLACE BAINE: On the anniversary of the '89 quake, imagining a Santa Cruz where it never happened - Lookout Santa Cruz - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Presenting the Investor Track for the 2021 Golf Inc Summit - Golf Inc. - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- "I'm Convinced that Good Architecture Creates the Good Life": In Conversation with Dorte Mandrup - ArchDaily - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- NBBJ's spiraling glass Helix will anchor Amazon's HQ2 in Arlington - The Architect's Newspaper - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- How an Unlikely Plot of Land Will Transform Miami - Architectural Digest - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Paris's Champs-lyses will get a pedestrian-friendly green overhaul - The Architect's Newspaper - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Sustainable architecture: innovative and inspiring building design - Wallpaper* - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Couple creates website, hoping to adopt - liherald - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Public To Weigh In On Revamped Beachfront Park In City's Pursuit Of $8.5 Million Grant - Lost Coast Outpost - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- City staff give updates on Albemarle Business Center, downtown projects - The Stanly News & Press | The Stanly News & Press - Stanly News... - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Secrets From Tel Avivs Eclectic Era Are Hiding All Over the City - Atlas Obscura - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- For landscape projects, know which type of professional you need to hire and how to find one - NOLA.com - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- French hotel combines nature and architecture - Construction Specifier - The Construction Specifier - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Midlands landscape architect begins the year on a (green) high - Premier Construction Magazine - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Gloria Kloter: Bringing the Industry of Architecture and Design to Even Greater Heights - Influencive - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Exec. of the Month: Thomas Perrino president and CEO of the Spiezle Architecture Group leads nationwide expansion - New York Real Estate Journal... - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Midwest On the Scene: January 2021 | 2021-01-18 - Engineering News-Record - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Winners of the 2021 AIANY Design Awards | Livegreenblog - Floornature.com - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- With an All-New Urban Design Category, the AZ Awards Kicks Off a New Decade. Now's the Time to Submit your Best Work. - Archinect - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Top 5 most-read stories on SummitDaily.com, week of Jan. 10 - Summit Daily News - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- P&Z Watch: Trees to Be Felled at 100 East Putnam are Focus of Discussion - Greenwich Free Press - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Zoning Approves Howard Wharf Hotel - Newport This Week - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- How have urban farms helped during the COVID-19 pandemic? - World Economic Forum - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Virtual workshop offered Jan. 30 on rain gardens and native plants - KPCnews.com - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Dickinson review: Everybody's stuck and frustrated in season 2, episode 4 - Cult of Mac - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Global Construction and Architecture Software MarketSize, Share, Value, and Competitive Landscape 2020 - NeighborWebSJ - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- After The Coup Attempt And Ahead Of Inauguration, DC Residents Are Feeling On Edge - BuzzFeed News - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Developer seeks rezoning to build new townhomes on Commerce Drive - Decaturish.com - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]