I’m Katie. I’m a proud Midwesterner, and all of these photos are from my Indiana backyard garden. By day, I am a licensed and certified speech-language pathologist. By weekend and summer, I turn full-fledged gardener and spend most of my time in my humble backyard paradise.
About six years ago, I began transforming our empty, desolate, almost full-acre yard to rich, healthy ecosystems in the form of garden beds, shrubs, and trees. In addition to this, I “raise” monarchs and proudly wear the title of a bird nerd landlord. I’ve raised hundreds of monarchs over the last few summers and successfully hosted dozens of broods of native birds, including robins, eastern bluebirds, chickadees, swallowtails, and wrens. I am incredibly passionate about demonstrating how to have beautiful gardens that serve our wildlife and strive to be proof that you can have gardens for both you and the ecosystem to simultaneously enjoy.
It’s traditionally thought that native gardens look wild, messy, and weedy. I enjoy sharing with others how to have aesthetically appealing gardens that not only suit our eye but provide essential nutrients, shelter, habitat, and life-cycle support to everything from tiny insects to our biggest backyard visitors. This can be done with intentional gardening through clean edges, placement of plants, and designated educational signage.
I am most proud of the change that this yard has endured. Going from what previously was one mature crabapple tree (Malus sp., Zones 4–9) and some mature silver maples (Acer saccharinum, Zones 3–9) along the side and front, this yard now has five more trees: a red oak (Quercus rubra, Zones 4–8), tulip poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera, Zones 4–9), blue spruce (Picea pungens, Zones 2–7), eastern redbud (Cercis canadensis, Zones 4–8), and river birch (Betula nigra, Zones 4–9). These were all chosen in an effort to return more natives to the area and support the insects and birds that rely on these trees for shelter and host food. Along with these trees, I’ve added five large garden beds. One bed has all berry shrubs for our birds. I call it “shrub row.” Another bed, which is my fall-interest bed, has native grasses, winterberry, goldenrod, a beautiful trellis that supports the native honeysuckle vine, and aster, to name a few. It is a beautiful focal point when everything else has faded.
Two of the largest beds are my mini-meadows. This is where I spend most of my time in the summer, soaking in the sights and sounds of the pollinators with either a coffee mug or a wine glass in hand. These spaces are home to so much life! Being that this yard is entirely chemical-free, the gardens are registered wildlife habitats, monarch waystations, award-winners for bringing natives home, and the best part: my true heaven on earth.
I’ve been part of several garden walks, and it just makes my heart beam when people visit and can truly hear and see (and learn!) about the things we can do right in our own gardens to help support our pollinators and birds.
Gardening wasn’t always easy for me. My first year, I did so much wrong! Like putting annuals in containers without drainage holes and not having enough soil in the pots. I continued to read, bought gardening books at garage sales, listened to seasoned gardeners, and attended free classes at Wild Birds Unlimited and local forest preserves. These events really helped further ignite my inner passion for gardening.
My hope for the future is that more people will consider planting natives in their yard space and rethink their heavy use of chemicals, insecticides, and sprays, which have such a significantly negative impact on our ecosystem. I love having encouraging conversations with others and enjoy helping guide people on where to begin. I’ve helped dozens of friends and family draw up, make, and plant their own gardens. It’s SO heartwarming when they tell me how much they enjoy it and wish they’d done it sooner.
I’ll keep sprinkling my passion showers wherever I can; I’ve helped put together our school garden, a pollinator garden in town, and now a tree effort where we will be planting 100 native trees. And I dream of wherever else this wonderful hobby of mine will take me!
This beautiful garden is full of flowers and even has a hammock for lying down and enjoying the space. It’s proof a garden can be good habitat for wildlife and beautiful at the same time.
Masses of flowers please the eye and feed pollinators.
An old chair is now a plant stand.
White obedient plant (Physostegia virginiana, Zones 3–9) blooms in the foreground of this lush, flower-filled bed.
Birdhouses and a birdbath ensure that feathered visitors feel at home in the garden.
A path from the deck leads to the garden beds beyond.
Plantings leading up to the front door are tidy and beautiful, with masses of lamium (Lamium maculatum, Zones 3–8) filling in with silvery foliage.
A big stand of purple coneflowers (Echinacea purpurea, Zones 3–8) provides nectar and pollen for a wide range of pollinators, and goldfinches love eating the seeds once they mature.
A birdfeeder is surrounded by fall-blooming perennials.
This wide view shows the many garden beds and trees.
If you want to see more from Katie, check out her instagram: @mylittlekatecod
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