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4 Tips for Creating a Small Garden That Welcomes Wildlife
Win over birds, bees, butterflies and neighbors with these design strategies
A small garden can be as attractive, low maintenance and supportive of nature as a large garden. When well designed, a small garden can be home to many species of wildlife. And when it’s in a neighborhood of small gardens, it becomes part of a larger habitat or corridor in which wildlife can live and thrive. Let’s look at some basic design concepts for small areas.
Little bluestem, hairy grama (Bouteloua hirsuta), blue grama (B. gracilis), sideoats grama and prairie dropseed grow in this planting strip.
1. Keep It Simple and Plant It Thick
Accept your garden’s limitations and work with them by keeping plantings simple. It’s going to look chaotic if you have 30 plant species in 100 square feet. Instead, choose 10 to 12 species, or fewer, and try to have two or three of them be a grass or sedge.
Grasses and sedges provide winter shelter and nesting material for birds, and they tend to outcompete weeds with their fibrous root systems and soil-shading nature. These will become your base layer that ties everything together in a cohesive way. Match them to your soil, light conditions and ecoregion for best long-term performance. Grasses generally need full sun, whereas sedges are more adaptable.
Sideoats grama (Bouteloua curtipendula, USDA zones 3 to 9; find your zone), prairie dropseed (Sporobolus heterolepis, zones 3 to 8), little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium, zones 2 to 9) and sedges like Sprengel’s sedge (Carex sprengelii, zones 3 to 5) or Muskingum sedge (C. muskingumensis, zones 4 to 9), also called palm sedge, are good options.
1. Keep It Simple and Plant It Thick
Accept your garden’s limitations and work with them by keeping plantings simple. It’s going to look chaotic if you have 30 plant species in 100 square feet. Instead, choose 10 to 12 species, or fewer, and try to have two or three of them be a grass or sedge.
Grasses and sedges provide winter shelter and nesting material for birds, and they tend to outcompete weeds with their fibrous root systems and soil-shading nature. These will become your base layer that ties everything together in a cohesive way. Match them to your soil, light conditions and ecoregion for best long-term performance. Grasses generally need full sun, whereas sedges are more adaptable.
Sideoats grama (Bouteloua curtipendula, USDA zones 3 to 9; find your zone), prairie dropseed (Sporobolus heterolepis, zones 3 to 8), little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium, zones 2 to 9) and sedges like Sprengel’s sedge (Carex sprengelii, zones 3 to 5) or Muskingum sedge (C. muskingumensis, zones 4 to 9), also called palm sedge, are good options.
Click photo to see the plants tagged and identified.
2. Mass Flowers
In 100 square feet, you could include four to six species of flowering perennials, planted in clumps of two to three. Planting in clumps not only helps the landscape look organized, but it also serves as a stronger beacon for pollinators flying overhead. If you want the space to be more formal, place shorter plants toward the front of the design and taller ones toward the back. You can also mix and match for a more natural appearance, with the mass plantings helping to avoid a messy look.
Think about including plants that will provide you with blooms throughout the year. Consider dwarf false indigo (Amorpha nana, zones 3 to 7) for mid- to late spring, purple (Echinacea purpurea, zones 3 to 8) or pale purple coneflowers (E. pallida, zones 3 to 10) for midsummer and smooth aster (Symphyotrichum laeve, zones 4 to 8), skyblue aster (S. oolentangiense, zones 3 to 8) or calico aster (S. lateriflorum, zones 5 to 9) for fall.
2. Mass Flowers
In 100 square feet, you could include four to six species of flowering perennials, planted in clumps of two to three. Planting in clumps not only helps the landscape look organized, but it also serves as a stronger beacon for pollinators flying overhead. If you want the space to be more formal, place shorter plants toward the front of the design and taller ones toward the back. You can also mix and match for a more natural appearance, with the mass plantings helping to avoid a messy look.
Think about including plants that will provide you with blooms throughout the year. Consider dwarf false indigo (Amorpha nana, zones 3 to 7) for mid- to late spring, purple (Echinacea purpurea, zones 3 to 8) or pale purple coneflowers (E. pallida, zones 3 to 10) for midsummer and smooth aster (Symphyotrichum laeve, zones 4 to 8), skyblue aster (S. oolentangiense, zones 3 to 8) or calico aster (S. lateriflorum, zones 5 to 9) for fall.
Click photo to see the plants tagged and identified.
3. Add Architectural Plants for Winter Interest
The aforementioned asters have showy bracts. The grasses and sedges will have winter foliage, and some will hold on to their seeds a long while. Additionally, a rattlesnake master (Eryngium yuccifolium, zones 3 to 8), or three, would contribute winter interest — it’s a great pollinator nectar source with cool globes in winter. I’m also a fan of roundhead lespedeza (Lespedeza capitata, zones 3 to 9); even though its flowers aren’t showy, it looks good well into the next spring. One red milkweed (Asclepias incarnata, zones 3 to 9) or butterfly milkweed (A. tuberosa, zones 3 to 10) could work too. This brings us up to roughly 10 plant species, which gives you some wiggle room to add one or two sentimental favorites.
You could also place a small shrub somewhere — maybe a Saskatoon serviceberry (Amelanchier alnifolia, zones 3 to 9), lead plant (Amorpha canescens, zones 3 to 9) or New Jersey tea (Ceanothus americanus, zones 4 to 9). If there’s room against the property edge, consider a small tree — something with spring flowers for pollinators and fall or winter fruits for birds. Chokecherry (Prunus virginiana, zones 2 to 7), crabapples (Malus spp.) and redbuds (Cercis spp.) are suitable.
3. Add Architectural Plants for Winter Interest
The aforementioned asters have showy bracts. The grasses and sedges will have winter foliage, and some will hold on to their seeds a long while. Additionally, a rattlesnake master (Eryngium yuccifolium, zones 3 to 8), or three, would contribute winter interest — it’s a great pollinator nectar source with cool globes in winter. I’m also a fan of roundhead lespedeza (Lespedeza capitata, zones 3 to 9); even though its flowers aren’t showy, it looks good well into the next spring. One red milkweed (Asclepias incarnata, zones 3 to 9) or butterfly milkweed (A. tuberosa, zones 3 to 10) could work too. This brings us up to roughly 10 plant species, which gives you some wiggle room to add one or two sentimental favorites.
You could also place a small shrub somewhere — maybe a Saskatoon serviceberry (Amelanchier alnifolia, zones 3 to 9), lead plant (Amorpha canescens, zones 3 to 9) or New Jersey tea (Ceanothus americanus, zones 4 to 9). If there’s room against the property edge, consider a small tree — something with spring flowers for pollinators and fall or winter fruits for birds. Chokecherry (Prunus virginiana, zones 2 to 7), crabapples (Malus spp.) and redbuds (Cercis spp.) are suitable.
4. Create a Path
Mulch works great, or you could dig in some stepping stones. Maybe you can place a birdbath with a narrow or small footprint in there too. Even a little bench nestled among the plants would show that the space is made for bridging the world of humans and other species, making it inviting to all.
Mulch works great, or you could dig in some stepping stones. Maybe you can place a birdbath with a narrow or small footprint in there too. Even a little bench nestled among the plants would show that the space is made for bridging the world of humans and other species, making it inviting to all.
If you put everything together, you have a garden that’s doing many things for wildlife:
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- Grass provides birds with nesting material and insects to eat.
- Moths and butterflies lay their eggs on milkweed, asters, coneflowers, wild indigo and grasses.
- Flowers provide pollen and nectar to pollinators.
- Ornamental seed heads create winter interest.
- A thick planting scheme of grasses and sedges combats weeds.
More on Houzz
16 Ways to Get More From Your Small Backyard
Browse plants native to more regions of the U.S.
Find a pro for your home project
Shop for outdoor products
Design a wildlife-friendly yard with the help of a local landscape designer