Native Florida Landscape Design Part 1 - Why Go Native with Karina Veaudry

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  • Опубликовано: 28 янв 2025

Комментарии • 23

  • @tomwessling7065
    @tomwessling7065 3 года назад +4

    This is a paradigm shift!

  • @ivylarsen5355
    @ivylarsen5355 Год назад

    Thank you Karina, I learned so much from you and these lectures are so well organized.

  • @jims6687
    @jims6687 4 года назад +5

    Thank you for putting all of this valuable info in one place!!!

  • @elizabethcuevas-neunder6158
    @elizabethcuevas-neunder6158 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much, I have been fighting the Huntington Pointe subdivision in Sarasota, HOA. They have turned our lake disgusting swamps. This people coming from other states don’t understand our Florida environment and ecology.

  • @mollieobrien6499
    @mollieobrien6499 3 года назад +1

    I own my own home now and it has one huge lantana (highly invasive) in the middle of a monoculture of typical grass. I hate having to mow my lawn. The lantana is feeding at least 30 different butterflies and 2 hummingbirds. So I don't want to remove it until I have native flowering plants to replace it with. But dang, I want some plants that can carpet my lawn that I don't have to spend 2+ hours of my time mowing 2-3 times a month in 90f+ heat. Thank you for the video, it is inspiring me to find a solution to my laziness while also improving the ecosystem around me. I don't have a hoa or anything like that, so I won't have to jump through any loops when I finally decide to take action and remake my yard.

    • @floridanativeplantsociety
      @floridanativeplantsociety  3 года назад

      Thanks for sharing your experience so far, Mollie. Check out our plant database to find native groundcovers that are right for your situation: www.fnps.org/plants. Enjoy the process and good luck!

    • @ssss3301
      @ssss3301 3 года назад

      Have you considered frog fruit for twin flower as a native ground cover?

  • @QbnAmCan
    @QbnAmCan 3 года назад

    Great information!

  • @memartin2188
    @memartin2188 9 месяцев назад

    My house has close to 50 crepe myrtles and I would love to replace them with natives that have similar shape and growth habits. What can I plant?

  • @marlenekrantz843
    @marlenekrantz843 3 года назад

    Should I trim a coffee plant or let it grow wild?

    • @karinaveaudry9479
      @karinaveaudry9479 3 года назад +1

      Never trim native coffee. Never trim any native plant really.

  • @fuxan
    @fuxan 3 года назад

    Yeh my neighbors did not like it when I did a controlled burn especially in an HOA. HOA's are hard to change from the inside out. I cant even get to a point that I would like in order to show what can be done. And yes fill dirt is horrific to me mostly because of transfer of non-native invasives like cogongrass. All along 301 and areas around the villages are being overran by cogongrass just spilling out from the fill dirt along the roads.

  • @fuxan
    @fuxan 3 года назад

    I cant help but feel overwhelmed. Every day I feel berated for having a yard that is native with very minimal area mowed (frogfruit and pennywort etc).
    And our HOA wont let me remove the invasives on HOA property.
    Disconnection from nature is a real thing. I need help.

  • @christieperry9221
    @christieperry9221 11 месяцев назад

    Xeriscape with native plants and trees for your area.

  • @wglenbatemanjr9729
    @wglenbatemanjr9729 3 года назад +3

    Thanks for sharing. ✌️
    ...oh yeah, LET YOUR LAWN DIE! Sunshine Mimosa! Controlled and informed succession 🤙.
    edit- When will invasives be banned? ANY BILLS IN TALLAHASSEE? Nurseries and retailers should HEAVILY FINED. Developers and builders must be AWAKENED

    • @DawnLauryn
      @DawnLauryn 3 года назад

      I love Sunshine Mimosa and put a ton of money and effort into trying to get it to grow, only to end up with pretty much nothing. That's back when I had good health and a disposable income. The only groundcover I had any luck with was Asiatic Jasmine which is still thriving and spreading to this day. I'd love to hear about native that will actually work though. I did have some luck with perennial peanut, but it dies off in the winter. Any other ideas for a good, native ground cover that I can walk on, never have to mow, and can kill the lawn tractor? I'd love to have native for the wildlife to be able to sustain themselves on, regardless of the plant's purpose (groundcover, ornamental, whatever). If ticks/mosquitos/chiggers don't like it, even better.

    • @ssss3301
      @ssss3301 3 года назад

      @@DawnLauryn Dawn, have you considered frog fruit or twin flower as a native ground cover?

    • @DawnLauryn
      @DawnLauryn 3 года назад

      @@ssss3301 Thanks for the suggestions, I'll look into them!

    • @karinaveaudry9479
      @karinaveaudry9479 3 года назад

      I definitely agree! Too many people making money on this bad industry

  • @BackyardFlorida
    @BackyardFlorida Год назад

    I don't use any fertilizer or insecticide.