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Transform Your Garden: Creating a Vibrant Wildlife Sanctuary with Native Plants

Transform Your Garden: Creating a Vibrant Wildlife Sanctuary with Native Plants Imagine stepping into your backyard and being greeted by the gentle hum of pollinators, the cheerful croaking of frogs, and the curious flick of lizards darting across the landscape. Turning your outdoor space into a thriving wildlife garden not only enhances its beauty but also supports local ecosystems. The secret? Native plants. These plants are the cornerstone of a sustainable, vibrant habitat that attracts and sustains a variety of wildlife. Whether you have a sprawling yard or a modest garden, creating a wildlife-friendly space is both rewarding and impactful. Let’s explore how you can turn your garden into a lively sanctuary that champions native flora and fauna. Table of Contents Why Use Native Plants? Selecting the Right Native Plants Designing Your Wildlife Garden Benefits of a Wildlife Garden Maintenance Tips for a Thriving Habitat Getting Started: Simple Steps to Create Your Wildlife Garden Conc...

American pokeweed

American pokeweed  American pokeweed is a perennial, and it's commonly known as a survivalist plant. The plant is often referred to as poke salad, poke sallet, pokeweed, poke, among a few others. During the first days of spring, purplish shoots of pokeweed emerge from the soil. The plant will often pop up as a volunteer, and depending on the location, pokeweed can grow anywhere from 6 feet to 20 feet tall. The stalks and stems of pokeweed are an attractive purplish plum color. The leaves are a beautiful green color, and they can grow as big as 14 inches long by 7 to 8 inches wide. The plant's leaves will be tapered at each end. By summer, pokeweed begins producing long clusters of green and white flowers. The flowers turn into green berries that then transition from a light pink to a dark plum color. Pokeweed grows flowers and berries often at the same time and will continue to grow until the first frost. I have never pulled a pokeweed plant up from its roots, but I...