Spend a week observing. Map sun hours, wind patterns, and puddles after rain. Dig a small hole for a percolation test, feel soil texture, and note slopes. Photograph shade shifts over the day. Ask longtime neighbors about flooding. These clues guide plant placement better than any catalog promise.
Group plants that naturally coexist, layering canopy, understory, shrubs, and groundcovers for living mulch and year-round structure. Choose keystone species like oaks or native asters supporting hundreds of caterpillars and pollinators. Stagger bloom times. Avoid sterile cultivars. Share three species you will combine, and we will suggest companions.
Capture rain from roofs into barrels or cisterns, spread it through swales, and sink it with rain gardens. Install efficient drip lines and deep mulch rings that cool soil and reduce evaporation. Water in early dawn. Track savings on your meter, and report how your landscape responds across seasons.
All Rights Reserved.