Golden currant

Golden currant (Ribes aureum)

As April rolls around each year, you likely find yourself thinking about this year’s garden — what to plant and where, as well as the fabulous bounty of vegetables and flowers that might await later in the season. Perhaps you have heard the phrase “right plant, right place,” and maybe that mantra already governs your choices. If not, it’s high time it did. And even if it already does, it’s worth thinking about how native planting might fit into your gardening scheme this year because native plants are all about the right plants that are already so well adapted to our place, the soil and climate particulars here in the Gorge.

In this area of Oregon and Washington we are so fortunate to have an array of native species to choose from that are well suited to our gardens, large or small. Perhaps you’ve already been convinced to plant more natives in your yard, but especially if you have yet to make that decision, I would like to suggest two key reasons why native plants might well serve our gardens and the species that depend on them in the face of climate change in particular: many native plants are drought- and fire-resistant, and native plantings are ideal for pollinators and wildlife habitat.

Mock orange

Mock orange (Philadelphus lewisii)

QR Code

Scan for more on Central Gorge Master Gardeners.