top of page

Search Results

8529 results found with an empty search

  • 162 Main St

    Vicki < Back 162 Main St I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Starting a 1/4 acre pollinator meadow on our front field. Collecting seeds from my mostly native perennial garden

  • 1830 Concho River Ct.

    B < Back 1830 Concho River Ct. I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Front flower bed: sago palm and (natural) weeds at the moment. Plan to plant some nice flower varieties. Backyard: Maples, oak, peach, etc trees and rose and bushes with all kinds of weeds. Barely mowed at the moment.

  • 35 Tall Oaks Court

    Ryan < Back 35 Tall Oaks Court I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.

  • 3017 Clearview Street

    Melissa < Back 3017 Clearview Street I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Nepeta, Salvia, allium, lavender, ornamental grasses, elm, hickory, maple, iris, and more to come this spring!!

  • 425 Wheeler Rd

    Melissa < Back 425 Wheeler Rd I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. I planted a garden for native plants in my front yard. I know very little about gardening and garden planning but am looking forward to learning. Yarrow, Lupine, Asters, Black Eyed Susans, Butterfly Bush, Coneflower etc

  • 1 Mead Way

    Sarah Lawrence College < Back 1 Mead Way I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Many throughout campus .

  • Millbrook Library

    Visit our public garden in Millbrook at . < Back Millbrook Library 3 Friendly Ln, Millbrook, NY 12545, USA The Millbrook Library Native Garden is a vibrant, pesticide-free planting space designed to support local pollinators while creating a place of beauty and learning for the community. Installed in 2025 on the lawn outside the Franklin Avenue entrance, the garden features native plants that provide essential food and habitat for pollinating insects and birds throughout the seasons. This project was made possible through the generous support of the Friends of the Millbrook Library, funded by proceeds from their annual Holiday Silent Auction and ongoing Book Sale, along with grant funding from the Millbrook Garden Club. The garden also reflects the Library’s commitment to environmental stewardship through its participation in the Sustainable Libraries Certification Program, which emphasizes sustainability, social equity, and economic responsibility. In addition, the Friends launched a plastic film recycling initiative in response to the Trex Plastic Recycling Challenge, collecting 1,000 pounds of plastic waste to earn a composite bench that will be installed in the garden in spring 2026. Proudly registered with the Pollinator Pathway, the garden contributes to a growing network of habitats that nurture pollinators and strengthen our local ecosystem. Witch alder, Black chokeberry, Red chokeberry, Spicebush, Little bluestem, Blazing star, American senna, Mountain mint, and more!

  • Manomet Observatory

    Visit our public garden in Plymouth at . < Back Manomet Observatory 125 Manomet Point Road, Plymouth, MA 02360, USA Manomet Observatory represents nearly 40 acres of eastern forest, coastal bluff, freshwater wetland and open grassland habitat. A living laboratory, to date over 300 species of bird, 500 species of insect and nearly 250 plant species have been documented on the property. Visitors are encouraged to enjoy the Kathleen “Betty” Anderson Nature trail, which winds through a series of old farm fields and former cranberry bogs, now being managed to provide habitat for migratory birds, pollinators and other wildlife. Interpretive signs and a wildlife viewing blind along the trail offer information and a chance to observe wildlife up-close. The trail begins at our information kiosk and ends at a bluff overlooking Cape Cod Bay and the Garden for Wildlife, a formal garden showcasing native plantings that promote local biodiversity. Trail is open dawn to dusk, seven days a week. For more information, visit https://www.manomet.org/manomet-observatory/

  • 32 Keel Cape Drive

    < Back 32 Keel Cape Drive I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. There are lots and lots of plants in my yard, and I have never used pesticides nor lawn chemicals. I have a “ Cape Cod” lawn. Winterberry, white oak, clathrate, cinnamon fern, ostrich fern, New England aster, witch hazel, viburnum (butterfly weed?), and Annabel hydrangea.

  • 2920 Route 9

    Evan < Back 2920 Route 9 I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.

  • 464 Esplanade

    Tai < Back 464 Esplanade I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Big Wildlife Dreams, Small Spaces Two townhouse spaces totaling under 900 sq. ft. were transformed into native‑plant habitats. The front lawn and invasive privet gave way to more than 90 species of native shrubs, herbs, and sedges. In back, a driveway parking spot was removed and now supports 50 species of native trees, wildflowers, and grasses. Even the smallest gardens can deliver a big ecological impact!

  • 26 4th Street

    Anna < Back 26 4th Street I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Anise Hyssop, Milkweed, False Blue Indigo, Blue Star, Echinacea, Black Eyed Susans, NY Ironweed, dogwood trees.

bottom of page