Creating a ‘bounty of beauty’ for bees, birds
By Debbie Arrington
Robin Netzer had thought about making over her South Land Park lawn for years. The loss of two trees in 2012 prompted her to finally take action.
“The removal of two old and dying liquid amber trees was the final straw for installing a pollinators landscape,” recalls the Sacramento artist and master gardener. “I was heavily influenced by other gardeners and gardens, Mendocino, Wine Country gardens and English landscapes. I’m heavily influenced by different painters’ landscapes such as Japanese screens, Klimt and VanGogh.”
With a new sunny space to work with, Netzer created the pollinator garden of her dreams.
“Its focus has been as a habitat for pollinators,” she says. “The joy has been a bounty of beauty. … I love the changing tapestry of flowers, leaves, bees, butterflies and insects.”
Netzer and husband Mark Paul have lived in their Sacramento home for many years. Their sloped and oddly shaped lot was a challenging space to landscape and irrigate; water wanted to flow off, not soak in.
By putting the right plants in the right place, Netzer added bold and bright color as well as reduced water use.
“We’ve seen a 20% to 50% decrease in annual water use, depending on whether it’s been a dry or rainy year,” she says.
Her water-wise landscape features many eye-catching plants such as a desert willow, California and Shirley poppies plus Matalija poppies (“crepe paper white crowned with a fluff of yellow stamens”), a giant ‘Pride of Madeira’ echium and an oakleaf hydrangea that provides multiple seasons of color.
“Always try seeds in the fall for a crazy and bountiful spring,” she says.
Netzer got expert help in her redesign. “I have done a lot of the work but Joel Brungardt (of Brungardt Landscaping in Davis) was instrumental in irrigation and streamlining much of the new planting, terracing and assembling vegetable garden boxes.”
Total cost was less than $3,700 in 2012 without rebates. Current rebates from the City of Sacramento could have lowered that cost even more.
During the summer, Netzer focuses on her trees.
“I take special care to water my trees,” she says. “I water early in the morning and use a moisture meter to check soil moisture.”
Her advice for other gardeners thinking about a pollinator garden?
“Do your research but remember: take time to enjoy the process, everything from dirt piles to finishes,” Netzer says. “Install irrigation if you can and mulch, mulch, mulch. There’s never enough plants nor time; enjoy it.”