This conversation with Jonathan from @BundyCreekNatives did nothing less than change how I think about gardening. I think it'll do the same for you. Before you press play, ask yourself this simple question: "why do I buy birdseed?" Then strap the *!@# in.
For more information about habitat gardening here's a quick article with an introduction to some basic ideas.
Want to see pics from the garden? Instagram: @freshclippings
Show art by Alison McKenzie
Production guidance from Evan Roberts
Special thanks to Jeremy Bloom
Episode music from Blue Dot Sessions:
Our Son the Potter (Love and Weasel)
Pigpaddle Creek (Sour Mash)
Gamboler (Pglet)
Pili Piper (Pglet)
Spring Cleaning (Love and Weasel)
Frank and Poet (Reflections)
I know it's a little late in the season.
Topher:In fact, it snowed here in Portland last weekend.
Topher:But before this, Sheds its sleeves and hibernates for the winter.
Topher:Just like my Japanese maple out front.
Topher:We have a lot of really great recordings, interviews, planting
Topher:content that we took along the way, so we're not quite hibernating yet.
Topher:There's a lot more to come, so stay tuned So today's episode,
Topher:Was actually really hard to edit.
Topher:I like to keep things pretty quick in terms of episode length.
Topher:I want it to be something that you can do the dishes while you're
Topher:listening to, or just pop it in for a nice little taste of being outdoors.
Topher:But the interview that I did today, Blew my mind pretty
Topher:much every topic we covered.
Topher:It fundamentally changed how I think about gardening, how I think about
Topher:the plants that I live with, and how I experience just walking around my city.
Topher:And I think it will do the same for you, so it's a little longer,
Topher:but I promise you it's worth it.
Topher:Let's get into it.
Topher:Um, you and I, I first sort of wanted to get in touch based on an Instagram
Topher:post that you made that I want to dive.
Topher:Um, in detail it a little bit later, but first, just tell us about your
Topher:Instagram project, Bundy Creek Natives.
Topher:Introduce yourself and tell us a little bit about your background,
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: So my name is Jonathan.
Topher:I live in San Diego.
Topher:, I do not have any formal education on, , ecological
Topher:restoration or habitat gardening.
Topher:And it's all just through my own passion.
Topher:And so, , I've done a lot of self education and just
Topher:connecting with other people.
Topher:And, uh, I initially, had my interest in habitat gardening
Topher:through, just being connected to nature through hiking and camping.
Topher:And, um, one thing led to another and, uh, before I knew it, I was
Topher:really, really interested in habitat gardening and using native plants as
Topher:a means to, connect myself to nature, and to just help the environment.
Topher:And like, so habitat gardening just means like you are gardening
Topher:to create habitats for wildlife.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Yeah, so it's gardening
Topher:with, species in mind.
Topher:Um, typically I think people usually are most connected to birds.
Topher:Um, some people have fear of insects, so, um, for many people, uh, insects
Topher:aren't even a part of the picture.
Topher:But birds tend to get that golden highlight of the reach that people are
Topher:trying to kind of attract to the yard.
Topher:Um, butterflies as well.
Topher:Sometimes bees, but then you get other insects that are kind of
Topher:overshadowed by the popular species.
Topher:Interesting.
Topher:What are some of your favorite, insects that you feel like get overlooked?
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Um, I think there's a lot of really
Topher:small insects that might not be as beautiful or as like, large as
Topher:like a giant swallow tail butterfly or as a brightly colored bird.
Topher:So sometimes I'm noticing, just like very small little beetles running on
Topher:the ground, that love decaying wood.
Topher:And so there are so many aspects to nature, uh, and elements that people don't
Topher:want in their yard that are just really important to have for these species.
Topher:It's interesting that you mentioned that specifically
Topher:on decaying wood cause.
Topher:I think one of the things that people don't tend to associate as natural is
Topher:things like decay and, um, that process of kind of being broken, things being broken
Topher:down, we tend to think of things as like it's rotten or it's dirty, or it's, um,
Topher:kind of cluttered and we think of that.
Topher:We exclude that from the natural system and we exclude that from our gardens.
Topher:But once you mentioned it, that idea of just sort of, you know, bugs
Topher:liking to hang out around a kingwood like that is as important as the
Topher:things that we think of as alive.
Topher:Like that's just as alive as, you know, a happy flower, you know?
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Yeah.
Topher:And it's an important element to nature.
Topher:Um, I think that the, the death and decaying process is something
Topher:that's really underrepresented, in gardens, and, and really
Topher:underappreciated in culture.
Topher:That's so cool.
Topher:That's really interesting.
Topher:I never thought of it that way.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Yeah, so, , growing up with my
Topher:parents, , they were always really not so fond of like decaying wood.
Topher:Uh, they associated it with termites and all sorts of other insects that
Topher:they didn't find to be very pleasant.
Topher:And, it's just an incredibly important, food source for all sorts
Topher:of insects to feed on and all sorts of birds like woodpeckers that rely
Topher:on decaying wood, and for the species that they eat that live inside of it.
Topher:And other bird species that kind of forage for insects that revolve around decaying
Topher:would, um, and, and decaying leaf matter.
Topher:So how do you incorporate those act?
Topher:Like, what do you do?
Topher:Do you just like go find a log and bring it into your space?
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: So great question.
Topher:Um, I think in some cases people might have, , enough plant material
Topher:around their homes to have that.
Topher:But I think the better thing we can do instead of trying to incorporate
Topher:every single element into our yard is, um, when we don't have an area that
Topher:we can incorporate one element, how can we look and incorporate another?
Topher:Because I don't think, uh, every single one of us is capable of doing that.
Topher:And I currently live in this very small apartment complex.
Topher:, so having Deadwood is not really easy for me to have laying
Topher:around on a concrete area.
Topher:So I'd say for people that have yards, uh, it's a really wonderful
Topher:thing to just allow to happen this natural process of decaying wood.
Topher:But then for so many of us that, that don't have that option, we have to find
Topher:different ways in which we can kinda help the environment out and create habitat.
Topher:Yeah.
Topher:So from what I understand, you kind of have two different spaces that
Topher:you're able to bring your interests around habitat gardening into.
Topher:One is the property, that you grew up on, that you still maintain.
Topher:And then the other is your more urban apartment style.
Topher:Um, how do you think about those two things differently?
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: So these are two completely
Topher:different worlds I grew up.
Topher:A little over an acre of property.
Topher:And so this is still my parents', property and I still do a lot of planting on it.
Topher:Um, so I went from, uh, a good amount of property and doing all sorts of
Topher:gardening straight into the ground and having trees and, and, and vast habitat
Topher:to, , now living in a very small space.
Topher:And so it's really challenging and very contrasting from what I used to.
Topher:But I'm trying to do my best to have potted plants around my area.
Topher:And I'm starting to realize that this is actually a very important.
Topher:Because I, I didn't initially, I, I had reservations about it and I was
Topher:really unsure if I would have a positive impact by having these plants present.
Topher:I just kind of looked at this concrete jungle as a very sterile area where,
Topher:, habitat wouldn't be able to be a thing.
Topher:, but now I'm realizing that, even though we've built these very urban areas, so
Topher:many species are still traveling through them, whether they be insects or birds.
Topher:And so I'm trying to do my best to kind of create an environment
Topher:within a very urban environment.
Topher:Yeah.
Topher:the way that I've heard that described is as corridor habitats, you know,
Topher:habitats that link other larger areas.
Topher:Um, and it's interesting, I talked with, , a friend of mine, Joelle, who.
Topher:Grew up in the Bronx and now lives in Brooklyn.
Topher:, and we talked a lot about what nature means and how people who don't necessarily
Topher:grow up in urban environments tend to think of cities as kind of other,
Topher:like, they, they aren't natural because we put up an apartment building, so
Topher:therefore it's no longer a natural space.
Topher:And I think it's really interesting to talk with people about changing that idea.
Topher:And so I'm curious, what are some of the like little natural moments that
Topher:you've had that surprised you since moving into your more urban space?
Topher:. clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside:
Topher:your point, like it's, it's so true in that we are all a part of nature.
Topher:And I, and I think for many of us, I mean, like I I, I've talked to people
Topher:in the past who feel very kind of disconnected because of the concrete
Topher:jungle they live in and believe in like the wild, as a separate place and,
Topher:and, and human civilization as another.
Topher:Um, but I, I think we should view it as, as being more connected and
Topher:especially realizing that every breath we take, we're breathing in fungi fors
Topher:and, and all sorts of microbiology.
Topher:But the, uh, one thing I've noticed is, uh, I tend to have a lot of, um,
Topher:insects that eat plants in my yard.
Topher:And so, by planting these potted plants, uh, noticing quite a bit of munching going
Topher:on, like on the plants that I have in
Topher:Yeah.
Topher:Yeah.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: And at first I was concerned
Topher:about this cuz I'm having like grasshoppers and Katie DIDs, , coming
Topher:in and they're even like breeding.
Topher:They're even like, I'm showing like little ones are showing up in the yard.
Topher:, my first initial concern was that they would eat these plants
Topher:to the ground . But what I've
Topher:what we all would be like, my reaction is not like, Oh, it's great
Topher:that these bugs are eating my plants.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: right?
Topher:Yes.
Topher:Especially when you're limited on the amount of plants you have, which I was,
Topher:um, but I eventually realized that a lot of these insects were just trying to eat.
Topher:This particular leaves on the plants.
Topher:So these like fresh new leaves that were growing, um, and they weren't
Topher:actually killing these plants.
Topher:And I had, uh, most of the plants on my patio are, are native plants.
Topher:And, I started realizing their importance in their presence,
Topher:, because their presence means that there's a place for birds.
Topher:And, um, the vast majority of bird species either eat insects as a part
Topher:of their daily diet or, or they rely on them for feeding their young.
Topher:Hmm.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: So creating an environment where
Topher:insects can thrive in general, wherever you live, um, is really important.
Topher:And creating a, a diverse, , environment with diverse insects
Topher:is also very important as.
Topher:That's fascinating cuz that actually takes us to where
Topher:you and I got connected, which was a post that you made on Instagram.
Topher:It just came up in my discover feed while I was searching
Topher:hashtags and , it was basically about growing your own bird seed.
Topher:And I would love for you to just describe the message of that post and tell us
Topher:a little bit about how you got there.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Ooh.
Topher:Yeah.
Topher:So, I realized that,, bird seed is a multi-billion dollar industry,
Topher:and, , there are so many people in the US and globally that, , view this as
Topher:a really nice hobby or even a duty to help birds, by purchasing bird seed.
Topher:, and so the more I learned about how big this interest rate, some $4
Topher:billion a year is spent in America on grid seed, um, it really got
Topher:me thinking about these numbers.
Topher:And, , there's an environmental cost of bird seed production and everything
Topher:from land use, uh, with mono like monocultural crops, pollution in the
Topher:process, land degradation by all sorts of herbicides, pesticides, um, you think
Topher:about like plastic production, all of these seeds are shipped in plastic bags.
Topher:There's shipping associated with it.
Topher:And so there's so many tolls that birds seed actually.
Topher:Takes on the environment.
Topher:, but they, the weird part of it is, and the unfortunate part of it is
Topher:so many Americans are, are viewing purchasing this bird seed as a, a really
Topher:beneficial solution to helping birds out.
Topher:And so people feel very connected, , by feeding birds.
Topher:, but is there a better way that we can do that aside from buying
Topher:bagged bird seed, , from the grocery store or wherever we get it?
Topher:And I think there is.
Topher:And so that's kind of what the post is about.
Topher:Yeah, I mean it's fascinating cuz I had never thought of it and I
Topher:absolutely am part of those groups of people that you're talking about who
Topher:are like, Well, one of the things I wanna do in my natural space that I'm
Topher:cultivating is that I want birds to have resources and so let me buy bird seed.
Topher:And what I didn't think about until you posted about this was that the
Topher:bird seed thing that's happening is we moved into this space that birds were
Topher:happy with and they were doing great.
Topher:And then we plowed over their natural habitats.
Topher:We put asphalt and then we had.
Topher:Uh, garden beds and we like put up different plants that they don't eat.
Topher:And then we were like, Oh, but these birds still need to eat.
Topher:So then what we decided to do is to plow over a different section of
Topher:natural habitat somewhere hundreds and hundreds of thousands of miles
Topher:away in like Iowa or whatever.
Topher:And then on that area we planted only one crop and we sprayed it with pesticides
Topher:and herbicides that like keep all the other, uh, you know, plants out of the
Topher:picture and keep bugs out of the picture.
Topher:And so that area is also not a happy place for birds.
Topher:Then we harvest this seed that we grew in those places.
Topher:We put it in plastic, we ship it all the way back to me and instead what it
Topher:you're saying in this post and I'd like to learn more of is just like, Why don't
Topher:we not do all of that, and why don't we just grow the things in such a way
Topher:that fed the birds who were here before?
Topher:Let's just do that more.
Topher:And it's, instead of cutting this like, you know, massive multi-systemic,
Topher:you know, journey all over the US just to give birds food that we like
Topher:took from them in the first place.
Topher:Is that, am I phrasing that right?
Topher:Yeah.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Yeah.
Topher:Yeah.
Topher:And I mean, it's not that these, even these seed companies that really actually
Topher:are doing anything at all for the environment, they're profiting off of it.
Topher:And you put it really, really well in that we have altered this land so much.
Topher:And so what is that exchange?
Topher:The exchange is, also just less insects because if we're having less habitat,
Topher:and we're having monocultural crops and, and we're creating environments
Topher:where we're just putting seed out, but not the plants that they rely on.
Topher:, insects are a huge part of this as well.
Topher:Uh, another aspect of that is,, people don't clean their bird
Topher:feeders as often as they should.
Topher:, and so.
Topher:There tends to be a risk of, , disease spread.
Topher:There's a few different diseases, , that are harming birds.
Topher:And we can tie that to, , birds congregating in areas.
Topher:Um, so since 1970, , North America has lost 29% of its bird population.
Topher:Mm-hmm.
Topher:, clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: but another issue with stationary
Topher:feeding is, , not only with disease spread, but , predation.
Topher:So we're seeing that cats are a huge.
Topher:With, with bird species.
Topher:And so when you're having a bird feeder, it's kinda set up in one area.
Topher:It's kind of the prime hunting grounds for these feral or outdoor cats, , to
Topher:just have a space to prey on birds.
Topher:And so, stationary feeders, can be pretty problematic in a number of ways.
Topher:Uh, but when we're growing native plants in our yard, it kind of helps
Topher:this natural process of, , a constant evolution of these plants, doing
Topher:their process of, of growing flowers and growing seed and going dormant
Topher:or dying if they're in the annual.
Topher:And so, um, it's, it's renewing itself.
Topher:It's a fresh supply.
Topher:, and it also is constantly moving.
Topher:It's constantly evolving.
Topher:It's not just sitting in one place.
Topher:So what are the, for a person who hears this and.
Topher:and that person is me.
Topher:Like, Wow, I never thought of this.
Topher:What's the first step for changing how you approach, how you feed birds,
Topher:how you give nutrition to birds that are in your, in your environment.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: So, um, for me it's just looking
Topher:at the plants that have co-evolved with the land that I live on.
Topher:And so, , I'm trying my best to have a, as much of a sustainable approach
Topher:and native plants seem to be one of the most beneficial things we can do.
Topher:, so I think the first step is be aware of, of what plants.
Topher:Naturally grow in your area that are locally native to your area.
Topher:And that create a food source for birds and insects alike.
Topher:, and also understand that if it, if you can, um, it's really helpful to
Topher:plant a variety of different plants as well, uh, and an abundance if possible.
Topher:Cuz where there's a variety of different plants, you get a
Topher:varying, , types of insects as well.
Topher:And so the world of birds revolves around more than just seed.
Topher:And that's what I want people to realize is seeds are a great
Topher:start to being connected to birds.
Topher:But there are so many other things.
Topher:That we can do to make birds attracted to our yard, um, and to offer them a place
Topher:of refuge and a place of food and habitat.
Topher:That's cool.
Topher:And that kind of takes me back a little bit further even the name of
Topher:your Instagram is Bundy Creek native and
Topher:that name refers to the environment that you grew up in.
Topher:Um, and so I'm curious if you could tell us a little bit more about
Topher:that, your relationship with it and like what that environment was
Topher:like , both when you started and then maybe how it's changed as you've been
Topher:able to kind of work with it, um, and invest in it as habitat gardening.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Yeah, so my, my parents' property is very
Topher:close to this watershed called Bundy Creek and this watershed, , has some of the last
Topher:habitat in the town that I grew up in.
Topher:Um, it's just kind of an area that's really not so altered by humans.
Topher:And so, um, my parents used to spray, , herbicide over what seems like
Topher:every inch of the land in the past.
Topher:, and I convinced them to stop doing that cuz I was curious to see what
Topher:would happen and what would show up.
Topher:And what started happening is, um, plants from all over, especially from this
Topher:watershed, had blown their way into the yard and started going, and this was
Topher:everything from annual sunflower species.
Topher:Buck weed species and other really beneficial species
Topher:for insects and, and birds.
Topher:, and so the, the exchange was having, not a lot of habitat and a lot of
Topher:annual weeds to us just trying to have a different , approach to the
Topher:land, , and trying to get back to the roots of locally native species.
Topher:And so there's, there's many ways in which I've been able to see
Topher:the importance of this through, different bird species and different
Topher:insect species kind of coexisting.
Topher:One of my favorite, things about their property is there's some
Topher:annual plant habitat, and there's an insane amount of, small
Topher:butterflies and bees and,, there are.
Topher:Birds that rely exclusively on insects that feed and forage in this one area.
Topher:And so, um, Black Phoebes and SAS Phoebes, for example, will hang out in these
Topher:areas because of the presence of insects.
Topher:And so, seeds are one part of it.
Topher:An insects or another,
Topher:mm-hmm.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Sorry, I.
Topher:No, no.
Topher:I'm just like, Yep.
Topher:Preach.
Topher:So what does it feel like, Did your parents love, like, it sounds like
Topher:at first they were like, Well, we don't love having weeds around,
Topher:which is a certainly prevailing and also understandable point of view.
Topher:And so do they like the changes that have happened and how, was there a
Topher:click for them where they were like, Oh, this is actually really cool.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Yeah, they've, they've, they've come
Topher:around and, , initially there was some concern because a lot of these
Topher:species of plants that were showing up were just, I mean, they were
Topher:so wild looking and so scraggly.
Topher:But, the, the, the thing I love the most about the experience, , of
Topher:discontinuing herbicide and then just seeing native plants show up and
Topher:fostering habitat is we were able to be much more connected to the land.
Topher:And so we were able to see just how it functions and how, in our experience,
Topher:the seasons of Southern California, how, how those play out throughout the year.
Topher:And, we felt way more connected because we made this exchange, , of, I.
Topher:Trying to work against the land, working with it.
Topher:And so, , the, the presence of all these species showing up because of
Topher:the way that we were able to manage the land differently, , has and does
Topher:continue to have an impact on my parents.
Topher:And, they still have the property.
Topher:They went there and, , they're able to see more biodiversity, and just a functioning
Topher:habitat with all these different species that can in varying ways, , contribute
Topher:to and be present in the landscape.
Topher:does it look better?
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: I think so.
Topher:But I think
Topher:Like, what is it like even sort of subjectively, like, is it
Topher:like, oh, and it like, now we have more flowers, Or like, you know what I mean?
Topher:Like, I don't know what's the, how do I picture this change even?
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Yeah, so well, there's a seasonal,
Topher:I mean, at least here in Southern California, we get a pretty long
Topher:dry dormant season of plants.
Topher:And so, that takes some getting used to for people that kind
Topher:of associate green as good.
Topher:Um, some plants just have their dormancy periods and so it's still a process.
Topher:Brown plants just don't look as healthy.
Topher:And so it took a while for my parents to recognize that they were doing
Topher:exactly what they were meant to do.
Topher:Um, but the challenging part is when people live in a homeowner's association
Topher:and they can't have brown plants or they can't have big plants or plants
Topher:that look like they're out of control.
Topher:And so for many of us, we have to really, if we want to kind of,
Topher:uh, rewild our yards, some of us are very limited and have to be
Topher:very careful about our approaches.
Topher:, especially with HOAs.
Topher:Yeah.
Topher:It's interesting because, you know, we're talking about.
Topher:Things that are natural, like brown plants are very natural.
Topher:That's a normal part of a plant's life cycle.
Topher:And, things that are dying or decaying, , or are discarded from parts
Topher:of plants, those are all very natural.
Topher:But we, on the other hand, it's like no, green is the only thing that's natural
Topher:and, in control is the only thing that's, you know, like nature must be, , neat and
Topher:green in order for us to appreciate it.
Topher:And it's interesting how those two things are kind of juxtaposed within
Topher:the work that you're doing around native species and rewilding spaces.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Yeah.
Topher:Well, and I, I too, you're reminding me of kind of an experience I had
Topher:recently where I challenged myself to look at the landscape, at my parents'
Topher:property, , in the time where the plants were most dormant, and stretch myself to
Topher:find out how I could see life happening and how I can see habitat happening.
Topher:And while there might not be as much activity in maybe the autumn
Topher:months in southern California with insects, there's still a lot going on.
Topher:And so flowers are spent and some of these flower clusters of buck wheat, for
Topher:example, are providing habitat for insect.
Topher:To live in, um, to live on.
Topher:And so, spiders also have their prime time, uh, during the autumn
Topher:months in Southern California.
Topher:Um, because they're able to build webs on all this dormant decay
Topher:that's not constantly moving.
Topher:And so, , that's a really important season for spiders to be producing webs.
Topher:And then spiders are really important as soft-bodied insects for birds
Topher:cuz they feed them to their young and they eat them themselves.
Topher:So I try to stretch myself to think, how can I look at these, , not so lively
Topher:seasons, , and see the life in them.
Topher:That's cool.
Topher:Yeah, it's interesting.
Topher:It makes me think differently about the things that I clean from my yard and the
Topher:things that I, you know, oh, this spider web needs to go away, it's interesting
Topher:to reframe it, um, and to be able to kind of think about it in a different way.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Yeah.
Topher:So how does, um, somebody who's interested in rewilding or native
Topher:species, like what is a good first step?
Topher:. clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside:
Topher:as a natural bird seed, uh, an insect detractors.
Topher:And so, , I would say for anyone wanting to get into it, , try
Topher:to figure out what plants might be locally native to your area.
Topher:And one good, uh, word of advice is, if you can plant three of one plant.
Topher:This actually really helps, uh, species be able to forage, bees and
Topher:butterflies like to have multiple plants in an area so that they can visit
Topher:different plants that are flowering.
Topher:And even if these plants have a lot of flower production, um, having a
Topher:larger amount of them than just one individual plant can be very beneficial.
Topher:And maybe just start with one species.
Topher:Another thing is social media is a great way, to get connected.
Topher:, so if anyone has.
Topher:Instagram or Facebook or Twitter.
Topher:, there is a huge, huge, huge, social media presence within these platforms
Topher:for people who are interested in habitat gardening and do it.
Topher:And so try to get connected, you know, look at hashtags, uh, for maybe
Topher:like native plants to your area.
Topher:Um, there are plenty of native plant societies throughout the United States
Topher:as well, and, that's always a good first step to kind of be inspired and
Topher:have some, some insight on how you can make your space better, uh, and,
Topher:and have more habitat for species.
, Topher:I loved your point about using three, um, because I think sometimes
, Topher:it's a mistake from like a more, um, rewilding, a native perspective, but
, Topher:it's also a mistake from like a garden design perspective to have just like
, Topher:a lot of just one thing of each thing.
, Topher:It like visually it's actually worse too.
, Topher:Like aesthetically it's very.
, Topher:Hard to have one of everything because then you're not, there's no consistency.
, Topher:You don't know what you're looking at.
, Topher:And I can sometimes get excited about variety.
, Topher:I had this conversation with my husband this past weekend where I was like,
, Topher:Oh, I wanna put some irises over there.
, Topher:And he was like, So, uh, like, where else would Iris's be?
, Topher:And I'm like, Oh, well I don't think anywhere else because, you know,
, Topher:there's not like that much more space.
, Topher:And he was like, Well, what about if you used something that we
, Topher:have in other places already?
, Topher:And it's such a good reminder that just like, also variety's important, but one
, Topher:of everything will be not, as effective.
, Topher:And it's nice when sort of like the aesthetic rules dovetail with the natural
, Topher:rules because that kind of like, It reminds you that you may have actually
, Topher:like an innate sense of some of the signals of natural environments being
, Topher:strong, and that would mean multiple of, of one thing rather than just
, Topher:sort of like this hodgepodge of stuff.
, Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Yeah.
, Topher:Well, and it, it makes me think about, you know, how can, how can we fundamentally
, Topher:change the way we view gardening?
, Topher:And for many of us, we have this idea of gardening that's kind of already
, Topher:been built in this way, um, that is very tied to being a consumer and, and, and
, Topher:making the design look a certain way.
, Topher:But I think one of the most important things, and one thing
, Topher:that's brought me a whole lot of joy is being able to ask myself,
, Topher:not what can I do to make the yard?
, Topher:Me exactly what I want and what I want to see and, and where I want things to
, Topher:go, but how can I let the yard, , be a place of sanctuary and of regeneration
, Topher:and, let ecological health be the focus in how I plant and what I.
Topher:Mm-hmm.
Topher:. We talked a little bit about how gardens, , in common sort of
Topher:cultural perspective, , are orderly.
Topher:They are, Always alive.
Topher:They are, , trimmed the moment that they become brown.
Topher:And how does thinking about gardens from the perspective of, native species and
Topher:habitat gardening, how does that shift how you personally or how I might think
Topher:about what a garden is and its purpose?
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: I'll, I'll share a story.
Topher:Yeah.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: parents had a letter dropped in their
Topher:mailbox from an anonymous neighbor, um, a little passive aggressive kind of a
Topher:letter that said, Hi, your neighbor here.
Topher:Uh, please, like, cut down the weeds.
Topher:Your yard would look so much better.
Topher:Uh, and
Topher:Wow.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: my response was, I bought a sign
Topher:that said , bird habitat, and installed it on the street corner.
Topher:And so, um, I think for many people they still will view these gardens
Topher:even if they have such well intentions and they're beautifully put.
Topher:Um, will still view them as an eyesore and will view them as.
Topher:Hmm.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Um, not the best looking yard because
Topher:of their, their, their, their dormancy periods or the growth patterns that
Topher:aren't, uh, trimmed all the time.
Topher:Um, and, and so it's, it's a, it's a, it's a stretch for a lot of people and I think
Topher:even for people in the habitat gardening community,, being able to let go of some
Topher:of these ways that were conditioned in gardening culture can be really tough.
Topher:Like maybe we don't have to deadhead everything and , maybe we can leave
Topher:leaves in certain places or allow wood to decay like we were talking about earlier.
Topher:So even in that, even in the habitat gardening realm, there are still
Topher:plenty of ways in which we can.
Topher:Let go of, , the ways that we have been so influenced by the iconic gardening,
Topher:which is the us managing a land approach, , and us taming a land approach.
Topher:And so it's a process of letting go, I think in a lot of ways.
Topher:How can we sit back and evaluate what's going on and see the ways in
Topher:which nature works, uh, and, and work with it instead of working against it.
Topher:That's cool.
Topher:It's almost like reframing, uh, what do we have to teach the plants
Topher:to, like what are the plants and birds and stuff have to teach us?
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Yeah.
Topher:I mean, I'm really very grateful that you're out there and kind of sharing
Topher:this perspective and helping like me just reframe how we're approaching even
Topher:just small choices and one of the ways.
Topher:You're, I think, shows that you're accomplishing what you're talking about
Topher:and wanting to help do, is that, you know, after reading your post about bird seed,
Topher:I totally kind of changed my approach to, plantings that I was gonna do.
Topher:I'm still kind of working my way into this house.
Topher:We're relatively new here and my husband asked me to plant some stuff
Topher:on both sides of the, uh, house.
Topher:And based on what you posted, I changed the types of plants that
Topher:I was looking for and how I was thinking I was gonna use the space.
Topher:And so I went straight to the native section.
Topher:Um, at my nursery, it's sort of like a local nursery that has a lot of
Topher:connections with local growers and looked for a range of different plants that were
Topher:gonna hit at different seasons that worked well in those environments that were
Topher:gonna need less water., and I had so much fun putting them in and imagining in two
Topher:years as they get established and as they sort of start to work their way in, what
Topher:those are gonna be like and what that's gonna mean for life in my neighborhood.
Topher:And it was so fun to be able to think about that.
Topher:And so I haven't changed everything that I'm doing, but being able to just
Topher:think about that new point of view in one specific project has kind of opened
Topher:up and helped me start to develop muscles towards other things that I
Topher:can do as I start to move forward too.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: It's, it's great that you're learning
Topher:things continually and I hope everyone listening, uh, would just stretch
Topher:themselves to be able to, to learn, continually and to be able to find
Topher:different ways in which they can kind of work with the land to, to help nature.
Topher:Yeah.
Topher:That's awesome.
Topher:Thank you.
Topher:We, it's been a fascinating conversation and uh, it just makes me wanna go
Topher:out into my backyard and just look at bugs, which I don't, I don't
Topher:immediately think of usually, but now I'm just like, I wanna see who's
Topher:out there and see what's going on.
Topher:clippings_jonathan092822_jonathan_bidwell-1y2wwb9ty_2022-sep-28-1715pm-utc-riverside: Slow it down and enjoy the bugs
Topher:Yeah, absolutely.
Topher:If you wanna learn more from Jonathan and trust me, you do his Instagram handle.
Topher:Bundy Creek Natives.
Topher:And if you wanna follow us on Instagram, we're fresh clippings.
Topher:Message us there and tell us what you liked most about today's show.
Topher:In the meantime, thank you so much for joining us on Plant Time.