| By Richard J. Ehrenberg
As I sit in the shade of 60-foot willow trees,
on the shore of Trippe Lake, at
the south end of a bit of land
I call Green Gables, it is a sunny
Labor Day, 2008. In spite of the 86-degree
temperature, a cool breeze off the lake makes
it an ideal setting for writing about our prairie
garden. With the steady wind at my back, blowing
away any mosquitoes in the area, I am looking
at the golden glow of the blooming meadow in
the center of our back yard.
I have called it “our
prairie garden”:
A brief discussion of semantics
may be in order. “Perennial
prairie planting” has a poetic rhythmic
sound which is appealing to one’s ears.
Pragmatically speaking, it points
out to a gardener reading this
article that this is a planting of perennials,
not annuals – and
in fact an intended planting, not
a natural occurrence. One of my
fears while planning the yard, envisioned a
city zoning officer responding to a neighbor’s
complaint of my yard being full of weeds,
to which my planned response would
be, “This
is a flower garden of perennial
plants, no different from any other flower
garden.” Then
I would let the city employee try
to figure out how to discredit
my choice of perennials in comparison to another
citizen who might choose all European or Asian
perennials. An additional comment about patriotism
in purchasing American-made plants might also
be in order.

A friend with a small tractor that has a three-point
hitch enjoyed breaking the sod
and repeatedly tilling in the newly
germinated weeds.
The confrontation,
fortunately never took place. Actually,
I talked to the zoning officer during the planning
phase and asked if there were any planting
restrictions and was informed that people can
plant whatever they like. The only
regulation requires that lawns
be limited to a certain height.
I did receive
a notice in the mail one time,
no doubt prompted by a complaint
from my lawn-obsessed neighbor
to the east who has a $12,000 tractor
with a three-point-hitch mowing
deck for the large areas of his
lawn, a $2,500 riding mower for
tighter areas, and a $350 push
mower for working around trees. The official
communication stated I must remove all weeds
in my yard or the city would do so and charge
me for the cost. Since the notice
was in no way specific as to which plants were
in question, I replied in writing that the
exotic weeds growing along the edge of my property
were actually on city land and then indicated
a willingness to pull them. No reply from the
city ever materialized.
Now for
a brief discussion of Pragmatics:
The term “prairie
garden” is most
appropriate when used for small
prairie plantings in yards. Early
on, I once referred to “my
back yard prairie” – and a professional,
who collects seed from prairie
remnants, told me in no uncertain
terms it was only a “prairie
garden.” Feeling like I had been told, “You’re
no Jack Kennedy,” I humbly apologized
for the error of my exaggeration.
Of course he was correct. Real
prairies are thousands of square
miles in size, and have many more
naturally growing species of forbs and grasses
than any yard can accommodate. Or they may
even be tiny “prairie
remnants” of
an acre or two of unbroken land,
land that has never experienced
a plow. And mine is neither. Mine
is an intentional planting, on
severely modified soil, of species of plants
that may, long ago, have grown on a prairie.
Speaking
as an insecure male, I prefer the
term “prairie
planting” to “prairie
garden”. It just sounds more masculine.
Women do gardening – men plant things
like crops, trees, shrubs, and
such.
In any case, our household’s prairie
garden at Green Gables was designed
to fill the whole center portion
of the back yard. The landscape
envisioned was one of a cohesive
natural environment, one in which a person
moves from a woodland setting to a prairie/savannah-like
opening, and back to a woodland,
while walking the length of the yard. I wanted
to live within a nature preserve – a
natural setting where plant communities
come together. I wanted to create “ecotones.” Hence,
the whole back yard lawn was replaced
with intermingling prairie species
that have been allowed to reseed
themselves and thereby move around
while interacting with each other, the soil,
the moisture, and the dynamics imposed by the
adjacent woodland.
The only path through the
back yard is curved around the
very edge of the prairie garden
in order to have as little impact
on it as possible. There is no arrangement
of flower beds irregularly placed
in the lawn or arranged with paths
encircling them. Small planting
beds have more edges than one large
planting. More edges translate
into less wildlife habitat and
more maintenance. Lawn weeds migrate
into planting beds. This is not
what I wanted to create.

The view from the lake side toward the house
is a seasonally changing mass of
color, uninterrupted by paths.
Friends
and family frequently comment on
the bright colors and the masses
of bloom that traditional, exotic gardens normally
cannot match. The seasonally changing height
adds to the interest, starting
with thousands of blue, white,
and purple 6-inch-tall violets,
which start to bloom in late March.
By mid-July the color has risen
to an average height of 5 feet,
and to the towering 7-foot cup
plants (Silphium perfoliatum),
scattered about. Daisy fleabane
(Erigeron annuus), a volunteer native biennial,
blooms for the longest period, from May to
the end of August. Some years they appear in
large masses, and in other years in the odd
scattered cluster. Spotted touch-me-not (Impatiens
capensis), another annual volunteer, has migrated
from the shady, moist lakeside, where it first
appeared as soon as we stopped mowing the lawn,
into the prairie garden, and has freely become
part of the colorfest. When dry weather comes,
a sprinkler is sometimes used to assist their
survival – their vase-shaped,
dangling flowers provide nectar
for the hummingbirds and butterflies.
The
attraction of our wildflowers is
not limited to daylight hours.
The constant movement and lightning flashes
of fireflies at dusk and into the evening,
from June to the middle of August, adds to
our back yard activity and visual interest.
Fireflies do not appear in my neighbor’s
lawnscapes until the end of July,
two months after having become
very active at Green Gables. They
apparently spill over after dry weather reduces
my neighbor’s
mowing schedule.
When we moved into
Green Gables 14 years ago, the
back yard open space was all lawn,
for which I had very definite intentions.
A friend, Mark Kuhnke, with his Ford
tractor and a three-point hitch
cultivator turned over the thick
sod and continued to cultivate
the soil throughout the growing
season of 1994, each time a new
crop of weeds germinated. For a
brief while, Roundup was judiciously
used in spots to eliminate persistent
weeds. Finally a prairie mix of
seed was scattered and raked into
the soil. Volunteers like daisy
fleabane quickly appeared. Over
the years rooted plants and additional seeds
have been added. When common milkweed and goldenrod
spread excessively they were uprooted around
the edges of each colony, and other prairie
seed spread in the place they had occupied.
Each year Virginia creeper (Parthenicissus
quinquefolia), spreads from the woodland planting
at the front of the house, and needs to be
removed each fall.
A total of 30 species have
been incorporated. Grasses were
not included, as I had read they
tend to dominate over time; I may
like to rethink this. The focus is on
color rather than replication of
a true prairie. [Ed. Note: Grasses
in a prairie garden setting not
only add to the diversity of the
planting, both above the soil and
in the root zone, but also lend
structural support to the flowering
plants and habitat.]
Just prior
to Thanksgiving, but after the
birds have emptied the seed heads,
we cut down the dry, dead forb
stems instead of burning. Being
in the city and having many evergreen trees
surrounding the prairie garden discourages
the use of fire. This year I will be
trying a new approach in order
to avoid the intensive labor of
cutting and hauling to the city
compost site. To chop the biomass
a weed whacker will be used, starting
at the top of the still-standing
plants and working down the stems.
This upper growth will be left
to compost or reseed on site.
A foot or two of standing stalks
will provide continued habitat
through the winter for both furry
creatures and insects.
The prairie
garden has required more time and
effort than the forest plantings
in other parts of our yard – especially
to get started. Incursion by sun-loving
alien weeds is the primary cause
of all the problems related to
planting a meadow.
Of course a traditional
exotic-flower garden requires the
same amount of effort and for the
same reason. In a natural meadow
planting, however, the native perennials,
in time and with help, become dominant
and begin to outgrow the weeds.
Intervention and continual long-term
maintenance will always be required
by both. However, the continuous
color and the wildlife activity
in the prairie garden are worth
the extra effort.
At least it doesn’t
have to be done behind or on the
seat of a loud lawnmower. The work
can be accomplished while listening to the
sounds of nature. Even while we work in the
yard, the prairie provides an ambience we prefer
to the machine-intensive maintenance required
by a lawnscape.
Definitions
Lodging occurs when the
upper portion of plant growth,
typically the seed head, becomes
too heavy to be supported by the
stem, and the plant bends toward
the ground. In a prairie planting,
tall grasses and forbs with substantial
stems assist in preventing lodging.
Ecotone:
A transitional zone between two
communities containing the characteristic
species of each.
_____
Richard J. Ehernberg, of the Madison
(WI) Chapter, is a landscape
architect.
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