home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
051793
/
0517140.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-03-25
|
8KB
|
161 lines
<text id=93TT1685>
<title>
May 17, 1993: Gardening Nature's Way
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
May 17, 1993 Anguish over Bosnia
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
LIVING, Page 55
GARDENING
Nature's Way
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A back-to-natives movement is bringing ecological harmony to
the American backyard
</p>
<p>By J. MADELEINE NASH/AUSTIN
</p>
<p> What Los Angeles attorney Mickey Wheatley hates in a
garden is the big showy blooms that most everyone else loves.
So three years ago, right after buying his first house, he set
out to uproot the prize roses the previous owners had planted.
While neighbors looked on in horror, he tore out the camellias
too. In their place he put California poppies, fragrant sage
and drought-tolerant manzanita. "Where everything is lush and
green, maybe it's appropriate to grow roses," explains Wheatley.
"But here it just doesn't feel right. For me it's almost a
spiritual thing. The plants in my garden belong to the deserts
of this region, and having them here helps me keep some small
connection to the wild."
</p>
<p> A decade ago, gardeners like Wheatley would have been
considered eccentric, if not downright demented. These days they
fit right in with the preserve-the-planet crowd and give a new
meaning to the term green thumb. The goal of the back-to-natives
style of gardening is to blend the landscapes of private homes
into the natural world around them. Why should Texans plant
daffodils and tulips when native bluebonnets and prairie
paintbrushes create such glorious displays? Why should Southern
Californians, who are trying to reduce water consumption, plant
thirsty impatiens rather than the vivid wildflowers that
decorate nearby hillsides? Why should Chicago suburbanites plant
petunias and geraniums but scorn the coneflowers and compass
plants that once delighted westbound pioneers?
</p>
<p> Back-to-natives gardening is driven partly by a desire to
get away from the monotonous landscaping that makes suburban
lots in Arizona look virtually identical to those in Tennessee.
"Our landscapes have become homogeneous," observes David
Northington, executive director of the National Wildflower
Research Center in Austin, Texas, "because they have been
painted with an identical palette."
</p>
<p> Just as important is the growing concern that typical
lawns have become almost sterile--separate from nature rather
than a part of it. Nature writer Sara Stein joined the
back-to-natives movement after she noticed the disappearance of
fireflies and frogs, butterflies and birds from her five-acre
property in Pound Ridge, New York. To bring the critters back,
she put native grasses among her perennial flowers, planted a
woodland garden, resurrected an old pond and created a
wildflower meadow. Author of the new book Noah's Garden, Stein
decries "the vast, nearly continuous and terribly impoverished
ecosystem" consisting of copycat lawns and gardens from coast
to coast. "We cannot in fairness rail against those who destroy
the rain forest or threaten the spotted owl," she says, "when
we have made our own yards uninhabitable."
</p>
<p> The first rule of native-plant enthusiasts is to go for
diversity. While a traditional garden may have a dozen species
of plants, a well designed nativescape will have as many as 100
species in the same space. This variety ensures a healthier,
heartier ecosystem because not all the plant life will be
susceptible to the same diseases and pests. As an example of
what happens when diversity declines, Dallas-based landscape
designer Sally Wasowski cites the beetle-borne fungus that
threatens to wipe out the majestic oaks that shade the homes and
ranches of Texas hill country.
</p>
<p> Back-to-natives gardening doesn't require a lush suburban
spread; tiny Edens can sprout within the biggest cities. Ten
years ago, video producer Jack Schmidling began constructing a
woodland, a prairie and a wetland in the small backyard of his
Chicago bungalow. Now his miniature ecosystems attract a wealth
of winged wildlife, from birds to butterflies. While Schmidling
is delighted, some of his neighbors are not. Although the
enclave is concealed behind a high fence, they have reported him
to the city, charging that his secret garden is an overgrown
mess.
</p>
<p> In places with fewer neighbors and more space,
nativescapers can be more adventurous. Marti Springer of
Tallahassee, Florida, surrounded her home with native plants and
planted parsley as a special caterpillar food. She asked the
county not to spray her bog for mosquitoes because they are
eaten by bats. Now she is planning to set up a bat house. "Bats
should just love it here," she predicts.
</p>
<p> The goal is not always to create a wildlife refuge. Many
gardeners just want a landscape that is easy and inexpensive to
maintain and not particularly vulnerable to the vagaries of the
weather. Barbara Humberger of Austin began going native in 1989
after an unusual cold spell killed many of the nonnative shrubs
that surrounded her lakeside home. Her property shimmers with
blackfoot daisies that bloom from early spring until the first
fall frost. UCLA neurologist Andrew Charles wanted an attractive
but drought-resistant cover for the steep hillside behind his
house. His solution was to plant deep-rooted California lilacs
punctuated by the orchid-like blossoms of sticky monkey flowers.
</p>
<p> Because native plants are well adapted to the regions in
which they grow, they require little in the way of care. They
seldom, if ever, need watering, and they tolerate insect pests
as well as extremes of heat and cold. They are, for the most
part, resistant to disease, and will flourish without chemical
fertilizer. By contrast, says John Dromgoole, who runs the
Garden-Ville nursery in Austin, "poorly adapted plants put
gardeners on a chemical treadmill, a treadmill we're trying to
help them get off." Dromgoole, host of a popular radio and TV
garden show, tells his audiences to get rid of Kentucky
bluegrass and seed their lawns with buffalo grass, a robust
short-stemmed native needing only occasional mowing. Instead of
finicky azaleas, Dromgoole recommends lantana, an attractive
flowering shrub that, in central Texas at least, thrives on
benign neglect.
</p>
<p> As gardens become extensions of the natural world, the
gardeners who tend them inevitably see themselves as caretakers
of a precious and endangered heritage. "In the U.S.," estimates
Donald Falk, director of the Center for Plant Conservation in
St. Louis, Missouri, "we have around 20,000 kinds of native
plants. And 1 of every 5 is presently in trouble." Midwestern
gardeners affiliated with the Nature Conservancy have started
to grow some of the rarer species of prairie plants,
incorporating them into their flower borders and carefully
harvesting their seeds for replanting elsewhere. Other
nativescapers play the role of modern Johnny Appleseeds. Andrew
Charles admits that he has been sprinkling the seeds of
California wildflowers ever more widely, "even on land we
ourselves don't own."
</p>
<p> Most back-to-natives gardeners find that getting close to
nature is easier than they expected and even more rewarding than
they imagined. Ken Stoffel, a dentist in the Chicago suburb of
Palos Park, noticed that he never set foot in his front yard
except to mow it. That's when he decided to tear up the sod and
seed in a prairie. This spring he noticed a hawk hovering
overhead, hunting for prey. A rabbit built its nest amid the
tall grass. A fox prowled through. "We've taken over all this
habitat that used to belong to other species," says Stoffel.
"This is my way of sharing the living space."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>