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- 2925 Braddy Rd
Kristen < Back 2925 Braddy Rd I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. I am at the beginning of my native plant journey and hoping to create a lawn-less wild wonder of a ~100% native garden. It has been and continues to be a fascinating learning process. Acer rubrum, Achillea millefolium, Asclepias verticillata, Betula nigra, Callicarpa americana, Calycanthus floridus, Carex cherokeensis, Cephalanthus occidentalis, Coreopsis grandiflora, Crataegus phaenopyrum, Cyrilla racemiflora, Echinacea purpurea, Eragrostis spectabilis, Eurybia divaricata, Gelsemium sempervirens, Halesia carolina, Heuchera americana, Ilex decidua, Ilex glabra, Juncus tenuis , Juniperus Virginiana, Kosteletzkya pentacarpos, Liatris squarrosa, Liquidambar styraciflua, Lobelia cardinalis, Magnolia virginiana, Marshallia obovata, Monarda fistulosa, Monarda punctata, Packera aurea , Phlox paniculata, Physostegia virginiana, Prunus serotina, Pycnanthemum virginianum, Quercus phellos, Rhexia virginica, Rudbeckia fulgida, Sabatia kennedyana, Salvia lyrata, Stokesia laevis, Tradescantia virginiana, Vernonia noveboracensis, Viola pedata, Viola sororia, Zenobia pulverulenta, Zizia aptera
- 1230 S Leopard Rd
Kathryn < Back 1230 S Leopard Rd I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. This garden was designed to fill an area in our yard that is wet in the spring, so the plants that were selected are ones that don't mind being wet. It is a rain garden in that it accepts water from our driveway. The garden contains beardtongue, swamp milkweed, prairie dropseed on the berm, cardinal flowers, turtleheads, norther sea oats, foam flower, various ferns, some shasta daisies (non-native volunteers I am trying to replace), purple cone flowers and black-eyed susans. The bushes are red twig dogwood, chokeberry, and winterberry. In addition to the native plants in the rain garden listed above, paw-paw trees, witch hazel, more winterberries, tulip trees, black willow, native rhododendrons, mountain laurels, button bush, northern red oaks, and northern bayberry can be found on this property.
- Hanover Community Garden
Visit our public garden in Hanover at . < Back Hanover Community Garden 17 Reservoir Rd, Hanover, NH 03755, USA Wildflower planting in the middle of the organic Hanover Community Garden. First planted by Creating Habitats for Pollinators (CHP) in Fall 2024 and expanded in Fall 2025. Additional support was provided by Dartmouth College's Class of '89 Pollinator Project. A seed mix of more than 50 species of pollinator-friendly wildflowers. The mix is comprised of 75% native perennials/biennials and 25% annual wildflowers. CHP uses annual wildflowers as a cover crop while the native plants get established.
- Methodist Theological School in Ohio
Visit our public garden in Delaware at . < Back Methodist Theological School in Ohio 3081 Columbus Pike, Delaware, OH 43015, USA We continue to establish native prairie plants in pollinator beds around campus, and we have one "seed bank" pollinator bed with a variety of species going into its third year. Wild senna, big bluestem, joe pye (and others), riddell's goldenrod (and others), blazing star, penstemon, catchfly, hoary wood mint (and others), woody sunflower (and others), coneflowers, rudbeckias, monarda, milkweed, ironweed, wingstem, etc
- 9 Hillrise, Dove Canyon
CAROL < Back 9 Hillrise, Dove Canyon I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. We’ve planted milkweed to support monarch butterflies and recently added a Pipevine plant to welcome swallowtails. A Winter Cassia blooms brightly and reliably attracts sulphur butterflies, filling our garden with movement and color throughout the seasons. As a family, we’ve also had the joy of raising monarch caterpillars in outdoor carriers —watching their transformation up close and releasing them together once they were ready. These moments have deepened our respect for nature’s rhythms and reminded us how even small gardens can play a meaningful role in supporting wildlife. Winter Cassia Milkweed Pipevine Pentas Lantana Verbena
- Veasey hill
Visit our public garden in Groveland at . < Back Veasey hill 201 Washington St, Groveland, MA 01834, USA The Pollinator gardens were first created in 2011 and grew to a large "room" of plantings once the Mass Master Gardeners became involved in 2015. The Miyawaki "People's Forest" was a rewilding project atop the Veasey hill that began with removal of 9000 square feet of invasives. It was initially funded by the Town of Groveland with additional funds from private grants. In the Spring of 2023, 160 volunteers assisted Master Gardeners to plant 1600 native trees and shrubs. Hundreds of native pollinator plants have been planted along edges and behind an educactional area. More plants will be added in 2026. The area is protected for 3-4 years by an 8 foot deer fence. In May 2026 Veasey will host a 2nd year of a 3 speaker series to educate the community about native plants. Everyone is welcome! We have 50 native plants in the pollinator gardens, 170 different native trees and shrubs, totaling 1600 plants in the Miyawaki Forest and in addition there are hundreds of pollinator plants next to and as part of the Miyawaki Forest.
- 45 Meetinghouse Ln
Visit our public garden in Little Compton at . < Back 45 Meetinghouse Ln 45 Meetinghouse Ln, Little Compton, RI 02837, USA Our smallish garden is overflowing with pollinator plants, most of them native to our area. We do not cut the plants down until spring, and this can lead to some flopping. So we do stake a little and cut back a few plants in early spring to reduce their overall height. This doesn't seem to affect their pollinator value. We planted wild strawberry at the start to act as a living mulch. It worked, but it become too aggressive in our little garden and we are now pulling it out. Spring-flowering Aquilegia canadensis (Canada columbine)* Geranium maculatum (spotted crane’s-bill) Zizea aurea (golden alexanders) Summer-flowering Asclepias tuberosa (butterfly milkweed) Liatris novae-angliae (northern blazing star) Penstemon digitalis (foxglove beardtongue) Pycnanthemum tenuifolium (slender mountain mint) Fall-flowering Eutrochium maculatum or E. purpureum (Joe-pye weeds)* Helenium flexuosum (sneezeweed)* Symphyotrichum novae-angliae (New England aster) Grass Schizachyrium scoparium (little bluestem) Groundcover Fragaria virginica (common strawberry)
- 3009 Nottingham Way
Visit our public garden in Madison at . < Back 3009 Nottingham Way 3009 Nottingham Way, Madison, WI 53713, USA We started converting our yard to native 20 years ago, and are at about 80% Native now. I do a lot of public education on pollinator habitat, and have a free native seed/info library next to my front sidewal. We have over 350 species of native plants growing in a wide variety of microclimates in our yard, about 25,000 native plants that grow at all levels: canopy and understory trees including red and white oak, black walnut, elm and ash, many dozens of species of understory trees, shrubs and vines, hundreds of species of forbs, grasses, sedges, rushes, and ferns. Great variety of early woodland spring flowers and ephemerals, with season long diverse species blooming through November.
- 11401 woodhaven road
TAMI < Back 11401 woodhaven road I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.
- 26 Captain Bangs Road
Shawn < Back 26 Captain Bangs Road I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. I am in the process of turning my property into a sanctuary for myself and native wildlife. I have eliminated most of my lawn (I do have grass paths), added a small food forest (PawPaws, Beach Plum, etc), and have begun to replace ornamentals with native plants. I do not use any pesticides and make my own compost with garden waste and my chickens' manure. Monarda punctata, Solidago sempervirens, Juniperus virginiana, Prunus maritima, Comptonia , Clethra, Eurybia divaricata, Senna, Chionanthus virginicus, Cladrastis, Itea, Lindera benzoin, Quercus rubra, Hamamelis virginiana, Cercis canadensis, Pycnanthemum, Vernonia, Rudbeckia, Echinacea, Eupatorium perfoliatum, Eragrostis, Schizachyrium, Amsonia hubrichtii, Asclepias, Chelone, and more!
- 9 Eldred Circle
< Back 9 Eldred Circle I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Bee Balm, Witch Hazel, Lady Slipper, wild germanium, elderberry, pawpaw, wild bergamot, persimmon, raspberry, blackberry, anise hyssop, swamp milk weed, American ginseng, ramps, yarrow, lamps quarters, beach plum, butterfly bush, comfy, and many more.
- 74A Fuller St
Fran < Back 74A Fuller St I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. A driveway garden that is approximately 3'x25'. Front yard garden ~265SF (22'x12'). Small, urban plots packed with native plants, plants pollinators and butterflies loves and plants people love. Common Milkweed, Butterfly Weed, Scarlet Beebalm, Black-eye Susan, Goldenrod, Ainse Hyssop, Purple Coneflower, Obedient Plant, Heliopsis




