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Summer
1999
[TEXT ARCHIVE WEB-PUBLISHED MARCH 2002.
ORIGINAL PRINT PUBLICATION DATE: SUMMER 1999.]
Purple
Maniacs Welcome!
By
Glenda Daniel and Jerry Sullivan
Consider
two models for your relationship with your yard. In one
model, you are an absolute dictator. In the other, you enter
into a dialogue with the plants and animals that share your
property. We can call the first of these the Burpee model
and the second, the Chicago Wilderness model.
The
Burpee model and we could just as well call it the
Ortho model or the Springhill model offers you large
and beautiful flowers in familiar and absolutely predictable
shapes and colors. You fill out your order form confident
that the seeds, bulbs, and naked root transplants you select
will if you treat them right perform exactly
as the breathless prose in the catalog promises (minus an
adjective or two). Your daffodils will take the winds of
April with beauty. Your peonies will enrich the heavy air
of June. Your mums will reach their peak just as cool nights
signal the approach of fall and winter. For as long as these
plants live, they will act their parts on order, filling
their allotted space with color in their several seasons.
Yet
your relationship with them is a bit one-dimensional. The
ecosystem is beautiful but shallow.
In
thinking about the Chicago Wilderness model, we might start
with the story of the migrating milkweed told to us by Skokie
residents John and Jane Balaban and then repeated in various
forms by every natural gardener we talked to. Native plants
plants grown from seeds taken from the wild
like to move around. You plant them tidily in a flower bed.
They grow and flower richly. But next year, they sprout
four feet away in the middle of the lawn. For John and Jane,
it was a purple milkweed, a respectable plant of open woodlands
and savannas. The first year, it grew where they planted
it. The second year, it grew along the other edge of the
sidewalk, and the third year it was out in the lawn. We
are familiar with plants spreading by rhizomes, but we tend
to assume that the original plant will stay put while its
daughters grow around it. The migrating milkweed just packed
up and went. There was no sign of it in its original home.
The
plants in the catalogs are like golden retrievers. The purple
milkweed has a bit of the coyote in its genes. It moves;
it may decide to take a year off now and then, remaining
underground for a whole season. A delicate forest bloom
like the wood anemone freed from competition in the
protected environment of your yard becomes an aggressive
producer of runners. Every year you will find yourself cutting
back the wood anemone to keep it in bounds. Instead of beautiful
but predictable, your yard is suddenly beautiful and surprising.
You watch and learn.
Wild
columbines are spreading nicely through the minuscule patch
of semi-shaded ground that we have designated our savanna/woodland
garden.
This
year we discovered a small columbine sprout forcing its
way up through a crack in the sidewalk that borders that
garden. Other people may have dandelions and purslane and
similar low-rent weeds growing in the cracks in their sidewalks.
Our sidewalk weed is one of the most beautiful native wildflowers
in the Midwest.
If
you let some pieces of the wilderness into your yard, others
may follow. Jim and Jean DeHorn, who have surrounded their
bungalow on the northwest side of Chicago with more than
30 different species of native prairie and woodland plants,
tell of the sphinx moth they saw hovering around the prairie
flowers in the front yard and the tiny hawk moth they found
last year feeding on and perhaps pollinating
the evening primroses that grow along the edge of the alley.
One
day Jean discovered an unusual butterfly feeding on nectar
from her wildflowers. The field guides told her it was a
Milbert's tortoiseshell. She thought she had something rare
and extraordinary. When she told scientists at the Chicago
Academy of Sciences about it, their response was: "Yes,
there were a lot of those through here in the past few days."
You
could take that response as disappointing. The amazing rarity
turns out to be commonplace. Jean took it as evidence that
her yard was hooking her up with a larger ecosystem. Movements
on a regional scale are an accumulation of movements in
small places, and her yard was one of those small places.
The
Balabans report a range of unusual pollinators including
colorfully named wasps like purple maniacs and great golden
diggers. New pests also appear, like the milkweed beetles
that somehow located the one backyard in all of Skokie that
had suitable food plants. One year, a flock of goldfinches
the only ones John and Jane have ever seen in their
backyard arrived just in time to gobble up all the
developing seeds in the flowers of their false dandelion
(Krigia biflora).
Most
gardeners are interested in attracting birds to their yards.
The main contribution your garden can make to the health
of our bird populations is as a spring and fall oasis, a
temporary stopping point, a source of food and shelter on
the long journey of migration. Planting flowering shrubs
and trees is a proven strategy. They don't need to be native
to work. The two sour cherry trees in our backyard proved
to be magnets for orioles, warblers, and even hummingbirds
during spring migration when the trees were in flower. Native
viburnums, hawthorns, and dogwoods offer spring flowers
and fall berries for passing birds.
There
is an air of eccentricity that clings to the idea of natural
gardens. Some communities even have laws that require that
every house be surrounded by the sort of regimented landscapes
that demand heavy annual applications of chemicals to maintain
their uniformity and sterility. In the minds of the people
who created those laws, the natural garden seems to be associated
with houses hidden among tall weeds and rank shrubs where
hermits live with armies of house cats.
But
most "wild" yards have nature and civilization
mixed. Lawns, after all, are fine places for volleyball
games. Our own lawn shares space with the World's Smallest
Prairie, a patch of ground measuring 10 by 15 feet. Through
the summer it entertains us with two species of blazing
star, compass plant, wild bergamot, butterfly weed, prairie
dock, big bluestem, Culver's root, and northern dropseed.
Entertains us, too, with an assortment of butterflies and
bumble bees. But in early spring, when we desperately need
some greenery and some big showy flowers, the prairie is
dormant. At that time of year, the World's Smallest Prairie
sprouts daffodils and tulips straight from the Burpee catalog.
Aesthetically,
natural gardens broaden the palette, introducing new colors
and textures to our artificial landscapes. Practically,
they may be difficult to propagate but, once established,
they can thrive with much less tending than the domestics
require. Plants whose genes have been burnished by 10,000
Midwestern summers can get through an August dry spell unwatered,
and our native Rosa carolina can handle January without
the covering that hybrid tea roses often require.
Most
natural gardeners were inspired to try to recreate a bit
of prairie or woodland on their doorsteps after looking
at the beauty of our natural areas. John and Jane Balaban
got interested on woodland walks where they photographed
wildflowers. Jean DeHorn can trace her interest to a single
talk by Bret Rappaport, president of the Wild Ones Natural
Landscapers, Ltd., at a conference on attracting wildlife
in urban areas. "We had already stopped putting pesticides
on our lawn, because we were feeding birds," she said.
"So our lawn wasn't looking too great, anyway. Jim
had suggested that we either re-sod it or expand the flower
garden. I hurried home that day to get there before he started
laying sod."
Most
neighbors of city wildflower gardeners are fairly tolerant
and even somewhat interested. Jean DeHorn said one neighbor
tries to walk by the DeHorn's house when running errands
because it looks different every time she passes.
This
reaction isn't universal, of course. The first year of Jean's
garden, a woman stopped by to watch her weeding for a few
minutes. Finally she shook her head sympathetically and
said, "It will take you a long time to get rid of all
that."
Sources:
The following is a partial list of some local, well-known
nurseries supplying native plants and seeds:
Art
and Linda's Wildflowers
3730 54th Avenue
Cicero, Illinois 60804
(630) 863-6534 |
Prairie
Ridge Nursery
9738 Overland Road
Mt. Horeb, Wisconsin 53572
(608) 437-5245 |
The
Natural Garden
38W443 Highway 64
St. Charles, Illinois 60175
(630) 584-0150 |
Spence
Restoration Nursery
PO Box 546
2220 E. Fuson Road
Muncie, Indiana 47308
(765) 286-7154 |
For
advice, counsel, and wild plant fellowship, contact:
Wild Ones Natural Landscapers, Ltd.
c/o Bret Rappoport
180 N. LaSalle Street
Chicago, Illinois 60601
(312) 845-5116
Glenda
Daniel, director of the Urban Program at the Openlands Project,
is married to Jerry Sullivan, a naturalist with the Forest
Preserve District of Cook County. Their garden lies at the
northeastern corner of Chicago's 40th Ward.
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