We replaced a central lawn of noxious, invasive goat head weed with a native plant garden to support local pollinators and teach students about local flora and fauna.
Wild Ones San Diego is dedicated to planting native flora that support native fauna, and we were excited to have the opportunity to install a pollinator garden in the heart of San Altos Elementary School. We were especially inspired to replace the existing lawn because children were continuously going to the nurse with puncture wounds from the spiked seed pods. We removed the dangerous weeds, designed the garden, and laid the groundwork in 2024, with the help of a grant from Wild Ones National. We finished planting and installing signage in January 2025, and held a ribbon cutting ceremony for the school board, PTA, students, and families in March 2025. Since then, the plants have absolutely thrived, and the children are able to learn from the educational signs, and sit on stumps and benches next to the water feature to observe the bees and butterflies that the garden attracts. They also learn about the food cycle, as these insects help to pollinate the school food garden immediately adjacent.
Wild Ones San Diego called on our volunteers to help with the design, landscaping, irrigation, and planting. We also collaborated closely with Busy Bee Gardening Co-op in Lemon Grove and Caterpillar Chow in Lakeside. We received funding from Wild Ones National, donated plants from Xerces Society, donated gravel from RCP Block & Brick, and donated landscape design from our Secretary, Jeanine Sharkey.
This particular project is complete, but we have the opportunity to extend the garden into the storm drain system behind the school and down past the pathway that leads to the back entrance of the school. There is also a seed library near the back entrance that resources can help us to stock. And Wild Ones San Diego is engaged in several other garden installations throughout San Diego at the moment, which can always use more funding for supplies and volunteer appreciation.



Learn more at https://sandiego.wildones.org/