When we moved into our new rental home, I saw that the front yard was empty –– filled with dry clay, Bermuda grass, and outlined with oxalis. There were some previous rose bushes, and root bound succulents on the perimeter of the front yard, but otherwise, there was potential for growth.
We started by sheet mulching the front yard with cardboard, spreading a huge chip drop, and then placing in our drought resistant California natives –– a total of 19 one-gallon containers were the first pioneers of this new established place: buckwheat, manzanita, coffeeberry, deergrass, fuchsia, penstemon, wooly blue, asters, sages, etc.
Since then, friends have come by to help outline the walking areas with long sticks and logs (leftover from the chip drop), plant seedlings for spring, and this December, we’ve frequented pine tree lots for their free pine branches, wood pucks, and needles. Using these available resources, we’ve created a mini tipi for the local birds to examine, laid out a woodpuck mini trail, and befriended a black phoebe “Tux”.
It’s only been 1.5 months since we started this, and every day I come out with a cup of coffee to wander and enjoy the new sites that the yard has to offer: the wooly blue smells like bubblegum, there’s a moss that wasn’t there before, and so many different types of fungi that probably hitchhiked over.