My book and web site

Check out my book, The Sustainable-Enough Garden, available on Amazon, and the book's web site at www.thesustainable-enoughgarden.com. See more plant photos on Instagram.

Sunday, May 10, 2020

Sustainable enough

I just listened to an informative interview with Uli Lorimer, director of horticulture at Native Plant Trust, our local native plant society in Framingham, Massachusetts. Uli was a guest on garden writer Thomas Christopher’s weekly radio show and podcast, Growing Greener. Thomas focused the interview on native and locally adapted plants.

Monarch on New England aster

    Together, the two men proposed a type of garden that’s designed to serve the interests of as many living things as possible, not just humans. Instead of choosing plants because they’re pretty, you’d select what performs the most useful functions for your garden ecosystem. You’d put aside neatness as a top aesthetic priority.


Goldenrod is a key player in this meadow ecosystem in Maine

    This is the path I want to follow, but I argue that we don’t all have to arrive right away. Uli pointed out that much important information about native plants hasn’t yet been ascertained, and the rest hasn’t spread past native plant enthusiasts. As a start, he suggested, growers should be using plant labels to tell where plants came from and how they were propagated.


A plant label that lists the seed source and nursery location

    Native Plant Trust advocates growing plants that evolved in the local ecoregion, the area with the same environmental conditions they'll find in your garden. In addition, they value genetic diversity within each species, meaning plants that are grown from seed, not cloned through cuttings or divisions to be genetically identical. 


    A genetically diverse, locally adapted plant population will be well-equipped to deal with shifts in its environment, including rapidly changing climate. But so far, conventional growers haven’t figured out how growing from seed could be scaled up to their volume of production in a financially viable way. In addition, we consumers have been trained to want reliably uniform plants, which is what you get with clones. Seed-grown plants are variable. 


Mass produced plants are genetically identical and uniform

    Native Plant Trust sells about 300 species of locally adapted native plants at their garden shop. They’re grown from ethically collected wild seed of known New England provenance. But what if the shop doesn’t offer a native plant you’d like to buy? Is it wrong to buy plants that don’t meet their high standards?


    This brings me to my point. I think becoming a sustainable gardener, and a native plant gardener, can be a process. You don’t have to change everything all at once. After 35 years, my garden is full of nonnative plants I’ve chosen over the years. Many of the ones that have survived are plants I love and wouldn’t dream of removing. We have a history together.


They'll have to pry my nonnative white bleeding heart from my cold dead trowel

    Every year as I learn more about native plants, I add more of them to the garden. I adjust my gardening approach to accommodate their needs and welcome a richer population of wildlife, especially insects. Is it still OK to buy nonnative plants because you like them, or North American native plants even if they’re not local, they’re “improved” cultivars of native species, or they’ve been propagated asexually? I think it is. If we’re thinking about these issues, we’re moving toward full sustainability, even if we’re not there yet.


Newly planted mountain mint from NPT--native, locally grown and adapted
 

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