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    <title>The Gimpy Gardener</title>
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    <updated>2008-06-11T10:38:13Z</updated> 
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    <id>tag:vox.com,2006:6p00c2252371ea604a/tags/%22wildlife+garden%22/</id> 
    <subtitle>Fruit Geekery and Arm Gimpery</subtitle>  
    
    <entry>
        <title>The Joys of Wildlife Gardening</title>   
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        <published>2008-04-18T06:45:58Z</published>
        <updated>2008-06-11T10:38:13Z</updated>
    
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        <p>I&#39;m a suburban girl.&#160; I grew up in a sedate suburb of Los Angeles.&#160; I
encountered some creepy crawlies in our first home because it was a new
development being carved out of what was a previously undeveloped
cluster of hills.&#160; So we had to watch out for rattlesnakes, I saw a
tarantula once, and there were lizards and other things around.&#160; When
we moved from there to the long-since-developed flatlands, I hardly saw
any animals that weren&#39;t pets or pests. I&#39;m not sure why (perhaps it&#39;s
that I find animals inscrutable and thus unpredictable) but I&#39;m scared
of most animals.&#160; I had bad experiences with dogs because of a number
of irresponsible dog owners that would let their large aggressive dogs
roam around the neighborhood free to chase and nip at little kids
coming home from school.&#160; I&#39;ve tried to overcome my fears and have had
some limited success.&#160; Though I&#39;m not a stereotypical nature girl, I&#39;m
environmentalist in my politics.&#160; So in gardening it&#39;s important to me
to provide habitat.




</p><p>




As for my own habitat, I like edibles.&#160; So my very first focus is on
planting fruits, vegetables and herbs.&#160; But where appropriate and
possible, I plant native plants.&#160; And some non-natives that act as good
companion plants.&#160; When I moved into my present house, the large
backyard consisted of 3/4 lawn.&#160; The remaining 1/4 consisted of 4 large
raised beds (which were picked clean of vegetation), hybrid tea roses,
a couple fruit trees that had not been cared for and two pecan trees. I
knew I wanted to significantly change this yard. Although I wasn&#39;t
truly aware of it at the time, this yard was largely devoid of life.
The animals I remember seeing then were Argentine ants (exotic, have no
natural predators), aphids, scale, thrips, slugs, snails, what I call &quot;McDonalds birds&quot;
because they&#39;re so successful in urban environments (the house
sparrow), raccoons and possums.&#160; These are all animals that have done
quite well in urban and suburban environments in California.




</p><p>



I spent a lot of time researching the fruits I wanted to grow as well
as herbs with medicinal and potherb value.&#160; I also worked with a couple
fledgling landscape designers to incorporate native plants.&#160; We reduced
the lawn size by half and replaced the lawn with Pacific Sod&#39;s No-Mow
mix, which I&#39;d seen and fallen in love with at Mountain View Cemetery.&#160;
The diseased and ill-formed plum and lemon tree were cut down.&#160; The
pecan trees which couldn&#39;t bear fruit in such a cool environment were
cut down, allowing sun to finally reach the raised beds they&#39;d shaded
and also reducing any possible allelopath effect they could have on
surrounding vegetation.&#160; In went apple, pear, plums, apricots, peaches,
citrus, mulberries, feijoa and loquats.&#160; Out came the roses and in went
strawberries, native flowering currants, wintergreen, native &quot;wild
ginger&quot;, fruiting currants, blueberries, brambleberries, native
buckwheat, native Erigeron, sweet violets, etc. etc.&#160; And, mostly
importantly, because I&#39;m disabled and unable to hire help often, the
yard often gets out of hand.&#160; It&#39;s not a tidy garden.&#160; So despite
initial heavy mulching, there are weeds.&#160; And welcome volunteers such
as love-in-a-mist.



</p><p>



The front yard changed from a couple hybrid tea roses, loads of juniper
hedges, a large jade plant and a passionflower to native flowering
currents, native and non-native grasses, salvias, cornflowers,
honeywort, alyssum, California poppies, ageratum, larkspur,
love-in-a-mist, native galias, chrysanthemums, native bushmallow,
Lavatera bicolor...and a couple roses because I ended up getting over
my disdain for them.



</p><p>
I think the first sign of life was sighting a soldier beetle.&#160; Then
after about a year of being here, I FINALLY saw a ladybug.&#160; A welcome
sight! Then hummingbirds started visiting the salvias and perching on
my mulberry tree.&#160; I&#39;d never seen a hummingbird sit still before.&#160; It
was wondrous.&#160; Such a tiny jewel of a bird. Fiery skippers became
regular visitors to the Erigeron glaucus.&#160; Honeybees regularly worked
the borage, joined by yellowfaced bumblebees. For reasons I haven&#39;t yet
divined, wasps like hanging around the dilapidated park bench I got off
Freecycle. They occasionally light on other plants, as I found out when
I leaned against one of my potato plants and got a painful sting in the
upper arm!
</p><p>
Now, after about 3.5 years of living here, I&#39;m seeing more new
visitors.&#160; While clearing overgrown weeds and brush last fall, I
spotted what I thought was a snake (yikes!) but turned out to be a
California Slender Salamander. I was surprised and happy.&#160; Though I&#39;d
like a pond, I don&#39;t have one.&#160; I don&#39;t even have a bird bath.&#160; Yet I
saw something I associate with watery environments.&#160; I started seeing
new birds that I still haven&#39;t been able to identify.&#160; I spotted a cute
stubby grassshopper.&#160; A Northern Checkerspot butterfly. This week kicked it into overdrive with a sighting of two breathtaking visitors on the same day.&#160; One was a butterly I&#39;ve not yet ID&#39;d.&#160; It was the size of a fiery skipper and keeps its wings open like that, looking like a triangle as it perched.&#160; It was a delicate pale yellow with a pale iridescent blue body.&#160; I gaped it it with my mouth so wide open it threatened to drool.&#160; Over the drift of volunteer borage in my raised bed, I saw a jewel red dragonfly.&#160; Red body, red eyes, red wings.&#160; I&#39;d never seen such a thing in my life.&#160; It was a sight to inspire Lalique.&#160; And again I marveled at seeing such a thing when I&#39;m not particularly close to any of our ailing creeks and a mile away from the San Francisco Bay.</p><p>I find myself thinking of investing in guides to local birds and butterflies just so I can keep track of what I&#39;m seeing.&#160; Great herpetophobe that I am, I found myself looking into introducing snakes such as garter snakes into my yard.&#160; I&#39;ve longed to find room for a pond and work with an acquaintance who&#39;s an amphibian expert to see about introducing native frogs. I want to get someone able-bodied to help me build a barn owl box for a little natural rodent control.&#160; Yes, I still leap and scream when I see a snake in the wild. Yes, I&#39;m still afraid the big fearless raccoons that rule the roost in our nocturnal environment.&#160; But I&#39;m happy to see the wildlife and to encourage the return of diversity to our urban/suburban landscape.</p><p>The key is getting rid of that lawn monoculture and planting a variety of plants from groundcovers up to tall trees. And even more important is not to be too tidy.&#160; I think the animal kingdom loves the fact that gimpy ol&#39; me cannot possibly keep this place as weed-free and manicured as I aspire to.<br />


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