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Posts Tagged ‘Natural garden’

There has been little rain since June, and our native plants have withstood the onslaught of sun and dryness with aplomb. The taller native plants also have shaded our non-native hydrangeas and geraniums from the oppressive sun and heat.

The Douglas Asters stand tall and proud while sheltering ferns and other shade plants behind them. All are sheltered by the native willow bush above them.

The hydrangeas peek out from under the Spicebush and show their big leaves.

Under the Western Spice Bush in the front yard
Under the Cascara Tree and the Vine Maple Tree in the backyard

We maintain the centers of defined areas next to the street with native plants while mowing the edges to give them some semblance of organization.

We leave the grass unwatered so that the entire color of the yard, this time of year, is a melange of yellows, greens and soft browns.

The front porch is seen from the street and yet the landscaping gives it a sense of natural privacy.

Our neighbor also shares greenery with us which is very nice to look at from the porch. All in all, we have lots of nature and yet still feel a part of our local urban spaces.

Looking to the front porch
Looking from the front porch to the street

We live in a tiny bungalow in the City of Portland, next to restaurants and other city features. However, our native plants habitat brings us birds and natural micro habitat settings to explore and enjoy.

Oregon Sunshine flowers and natural grasses.
Backyard with water stations for birds
Our baby Madrone Tree is starting to take shape in the corner.

Today is a special day for us as it is our wedding anniversary. Much to our amusement, we watched a passerby this morning as they stopped to enjoy our yard and made a pretty design with leaves from our tree. It was a special anniversary gift from an unknown artist. Thank you!

A Presentation of Art provided by a passerby
Front entryway

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Last year, I introduced the idea of making our urban yard a haven for birds and native plants of the northwestern United States. See https://marysgardens.blog/2023/08/08/landscaping-a-city-bungalow-with-native-plants-of-the-northwest

The goal of our small yard is to create a feeling of naturalness, but with some more deliberate landscaping using a small amount of mowed grass to give it a bit of shape.

I have tried to blend the plants between mowed grasses and naturalized areas to make softer transitions. The idea is to move softly between greenness and texture.

A number of readers asked for some specifics regarding the plants that I had put in. Plant names are located in the photo captions.

Buck Brush or Ceanothus cuneatus
Coyote brush or Baccharis pilularis
Aconite or Aconitum
Manzanita or Arctostaphylos
Fernleaf biscuitroot or Lomatium dissectum
Lupin or lupine
Cornish sanguinea (nonnative)
Red elderberry or Sambusa racemosa
Vibernum
California bayberry
Great camas or Camassia leichtlinii
Greater tussock sedge or Carey paniculata
Columbine or Aquilegia
Evergreen huckleberry or Vaccinium ovatum
Western Swordfern or Polystichum munitum
Red Flowering Currant or Ribes sanguineum
Golden currant or Ribes aureum
Vibernum
Red-osier dogwood or Cornus sericea
Spires
Western serviceberry or Amelanchier alnifolia

We have a small yard, less than a quarter acre in total. The plants photographed for this blog are front yard plants only.

The overall effect looks like this in early spring.

I will continue to photograph the yard as the seasons go by to show how it changes over the seasons.

Small front yard
Space between sidewalk and street. In the middle is the tree called Persian Ironwood or Parrotia Persia, a city approved tree.
Front yard next to sidewalk

A tiny little yellow ranunculus already peeks through the grasses.

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