Real Estate

How to Plant Native Landscapes: Designs From the Wild Ones Library


The nonprofit group Wild Ones offers a free library of designs, with plants specific to your area — and you don’t have to be a member to use it.

Turning your front yard into something other than a manicured greensward sounds like a bold new idea, even today. Imagine how it felt, in 1992, to see former lawns in Wisconsin that were already many years into their transition to prairie-like spaces, with no turf grass in sight.

Positively radical.

I was collaborating on a book called “The Natural Habitat Garden” with Ken Druse, a writer and photographer, traveling across the country to see the vanguard of the native-plant movement. We spent a day north of Milwaukee with Lorrie Otto, an early leader in what became a nationwide push to ban the pesticide DDT and a force in the formative years of Wild Ones, a membership organization promoting native landscapes. Ms. Otto sent us to visit other members’ home landscapes that were wild-ish, like hers — gardens unlike any we had ever seen.

Flowering native perennials and grasses and a serviceberry shrub (Amelanchier) have replaced some of the lawn at the home of Deborah Rees, a Wild Ones member in Elgin, Ill.Deborah Rees


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