Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are not “ saving the planet” with your tiny yard.
Wrong. People like OP are leading the way and WILL affect positive change for the environment, especially when we reach a critical mass. If we’re all rowing in the same direction, we’ll go a lot faster. And one political party is effectively blocking all big movement on solving this at the national level, so we’re going to have to do what we can in our yards.
I was with you until you brought politics into it. Most people, regardless of political party or how much lip service they pay to caring about the environment, demonstrate day after day through their actions that they simply DO NOT CARE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gotta say, I went out at lunch -- my front yard is all flowers, mostly natives/pollinator-friendly species -- and there were hardly any bees or butterflies out there compared to previous years. So far we have only seen those little white butterflies (which I hope aren't cabbage butterflies, since I have planted eggplant) -- no monarchs, no black, yellow, or blue swallowtails, and none of the little orange, yellow, or brown types we usually see. We currently have coneflowers, liatris, milkweed, sunflowers, coreopsis, monarda/wild bergamot, agastache/hyssop, and lavender in bloom, and usually they are covered with flying things. Last year we could literally have a hundred bees of at least a half dozen different species on the hyssop alone, today I could count them on one hand and zero bumblebees or honeybees. It's worrisome.
It’s legitimately frightening. I don’t have much native (yet), but the absence of birdsong is noticeable. I have some plants that are basically weeds (I haven’t gotten close, but I think one is aster and I know one is a native silene) that I would have pulled in years past. They’re staying now.
They must be all in my yard. We've noticed the orange swallowtails, the little flittering brown/orange onces, moths, bees of many species, hummingbirds. Monarchs we have seen later in the season. My milkweed is just now blooming. We've had loads of bird nests this year: robins, blue birds, wrens, chickadees, finches. We've even idenfied a new bird species we have never seen before. So be patient. It could take a couple of years. Longer if your neighbors use lots of pest/herbicides. Some bees -mason bees for example- will not nest in areas with that stuff.
Good luck and thanks for doing what you're doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gotta say, I went out at lunch -- my front yard is all flowers, mostly natives/pollinator-friendly species -- and there were hardly any bees or butterflies out there compared to previous years. So far we have only seen those little white butterflies (which I hope aren't cabbage butterflies, since I have planted eggplant) -- no monarchs, no black, yellow, or blue swallowtails, and none of the little orange, yellow, or brown types we usually see. We currently have coneflowers, liatris, milkweed, sunflowers, coreopsis, monarda/wild bergamot, agastache/hyssop, and lavender in bloom, and usually they are covered with flying things. Last year we could literally have a hundred bees of at least a half dozen different species on the hyssop alone, today I could count them on one hand and zero bumblebees or honeybees. It's worrisome.
It’s legitimately frightening. I don’t have much native (yet), but the absence of birdsong is noticeable. I have some plants that are basically weeds (I haven’t gotten close, but I think one is aster and I know one is a native silene) that I would have pulled in years past. They’re staying now.
They must be all in my yard. We've noticed the orange swallowtails, the little flittering brown/orange onces, moths, bees of many species, hummingbirds. Monarchs we have seen later in the season. My milkweed is just now blooming. We've had loads of bird nests this year: robins, blue birds, wrens, chickadees, finches. We've even idenfied a new bird species we have never seen before. So be patient. It could take a couple of years. Longer if your neighbors use lots of pest/herbicides. Some bees -mason bees for example- will not nest in areas with that stuff.
Good luck and thanks for doing what you're doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are not “ saving the planet” with your tiny yard.
Wrong. People like OP are leading the way and WILL affect positive change for the environment, especially when we reach a critical mass. If we’re all rowing in the same direction, we’ll go a lot faster. And one political party is effectively blocking all big movement on solving this at the national level, so we’re going to have to do what we can in our yards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gotta say, I went out at lunch -- my front yard is all flowers, mostly natives/pollinator-friendly species -- and there were hardly any bees or butterflies out there compared to previous years. So far we have only seen those little white butterflies (which I hope aren't cabbage butterflies, since I have planted eggplant) -- no monarchs, no black, yellow, or blue swallowtails, and none of the little orange, yellow, or brown types we usually see. We currently have coneflowers, liatris, milkweed, sunflowers, coreopsis, monarda/wild bergamot, agastache/hyssop, and lavender in bloom, and usually they are covered with flying things. Last year we could literally have a hundred bees of at least a half dozen different species on the hyssop alone, today I could count them on one hand and zero bumblebees or honeybees. It's worrisome.
It’s legitimately frightening. I don’t have much native (yet), but the absence of birdsong is noticeable. I have some plants that are basically weeds (I haven’t gotten close, but I think one is aster and I know one is a native silene) that I would have pulled in years past. They’re staying now.
Anonymous wrote:I gotta say, I went out at lunch -- my front yard is all flowers, mostly natives/pollinator-friendly species -- and there were hardly any bees or butterflies out there compared to previous years. So far we have only seen those little white butterflies (which I hope aren't cabbage butterflies, since I have planted eggplant) -- no monarchs, no black, yellow, or blue swallowtails, and none of the little orange, yellow, or brown types we usually see. We currently have coneflowers, liatris, milkweed, sunflowers, coreopsis, monarda/wild bergamot, agastache/hyssop, and lavender in bloom, and usually they are covered with flying things. Last year we could literally have a hundred bees of at least a half dozen different species on the hyssop alone, today I could count them on one hand and zero bumblebees or honeybees. It's worrisome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to thank the OP for starting this thread, and several of the responders for sending me browsing sources that provide native plants. I had been looking without much luck earlier.
80% of our property is left alone (we have acreage). In our previous home (similar situation), I had started reclaiming the woods from the invasives by planting natives. Our current property is less disturbed, but also seem to lack ephemerals, so I’ll work on that some.
The 20% that is landscaped, is a lot of lawn (DH won’t budge on that one), with extensive landscaping that is a mix of natives and non-natives. The few beds that the landscaper is not responsible for, I’m attempting more native species. However, it’s challenging, not only because of the soil (marine clay), and wetness, but because it is highly visible, and cannot be left to look wild.
Just because you have land and I do not, I’m wondering if you would be able to do holistic management practices on your acreage. It does require a herd of cattle, and for them to be moved frequently, which might not be something you can do but the ideas are worth exploring and would encourage natives within your pasture/wild areas as well as building top soil and sequestering carbon. https://savory.global/what-is-holistic-management/ I don’t remember which book I first encountered these ideas, but I am reading this right now https://www.amazon.com/Cows-Save-Planet-Improbable-Restoring/dp/1603584323 and it explains it well.
For anyone wanting to buy native plants online or learn more about individual plants, many plants at these outlets work on the east coast (and every plant has a range map, so you can see if it “belongs” in your yard):
https://www.prairienursery.com/
https://www.prairiemoon.com/
https://www.blazingstargardens.com/
Anonymous wrote:You are not “ saving the planet” with your tiny yard.
Anonymous wrote:I want to thank the OP for starting this thread, and several of the responders for sending me browsing sources that provide native plants. I had been looking without much luck earlier.
80% of our property is left alone (we have acreage). In our previous home (similar situation), I had started reclaiming the woods from the invasives by planting natives. Our current property is less disturbed, but also seem to lack ephemerals, so I’ll work on that some.
The 20% that is landscaped, is a lot of lawn (DH won’t budge on that one), with extensive landscaping that is a mix of natives and non-natives. The few beds that the landscaper is not responsible for, I’m attempting more native species. However, it’s challenging, not only because of the soil (marine clay), and wetness, but because it is highly visible, and cannot be left to look wild.
Anonymous wrote:You are not “ saving the planet” with your tiny yard.
Anonymous wrote:Get this guy's books. Also, any non-native plant has the potential to become invasive. Ask me about the effort and money that I've spent trying to eradicate some atrocities that the former owners planted. I have a garden full of native plants and a huge amount of bumblebees, other native bees and wasps, tons of butterflies and birds. The never bothered my two very active boys who played outside all the time. We kept a small patch of grass
for soccer but the rest is all native plants.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/meet-ecologist-who-wants-unleash-wild-backyard-180974372/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They’re not important.
Plant what YOU like.
"Let the bees eat cake!"
Bees aren’t native, either dummy. They pollinate non-native fruit, nut and vegetable crops.
We can do this all day….
We can; it’s not going to make your uninformed arguments any more persuasive. No, honeybees aren’t native, but there are 4,000 native bees in America. Haven’t noticed any in your yard, not many birds or butterflies? No, you haven’t; there’s nothing for them to eat, nowhere to live. That’s what we’re talking about. DP.