I’ve transformed most of my 1 acre yard from lawn to native plant gardens. Native plants support biodiversity!

  • Wigglet@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Me! We’ve reforested the sides of our ridge with about 12000 native plants. They are a couple years old now so slowly popping up but we’ve already noticed an increase in our birds/manu, especially tui who love the pohutukawa and harakeke

  • LambentMote@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Yes absolutely, though I find it a difficult spectrum between pure conservationism vs ecology. I want to plant as many natives as possible, but perfect is the enemy of good, and ultimately I believe creating habitat and restoring a functional ecosystem takes precedence over trying to wind back the clock on colonisation.

    I live in New Zealand and am in the process of creating a 35 hectare eco-community which includes 8 hectares set aside for wetland restoration and reforestation, and another 5 of already regenerating native bush. There are existing trusts we could ally with for support, however most of them stipulate planting purely natives, which I don’t believe is practical. There’s no putting the genie back in the bottle, so to speak.

    Here gorse bushes imported by Scottish settlers spread rampantly on any ungrazed land, and the reccommended approach is to poison them as fast as possible and plant natives in their stead. We’d rather not use pesticides, but there are other options. Gorse is very vast growing and horrendously thorny, but that can actually be a benefit - animals like rabbits don’t like to feed on it, so it can actually act as a nursery for young natives, and it requires full sun, so as soon as anything grows up from under it, it dies back.

    Being able to step back and find ways for ecosystems to work together to restore themselves is the only cost effective/sustainable way to do it at the scale and speed we need to.

    • Wigglet@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Every gardener kills a few plants in their time. Keep on keeping on! The beauty of natives is they have evolved to grow exactly where you are and will thrive with little to no care from you. They are a great confidence builder. Ask around your community garden shop for what works best in your specific area as sometimes the internet recommends something for outside your specific microclimate.