A Pollinator Highway Through Your Side Yard

Native wildflowers in a side yard corridor create a pollinator highway connecting front and back gardens.

Why it works

Pollinators need connected habitat to move safely through landscapes. A side yard pollinator corridor links your front garden, backyard, and neighboring properties. The linear shape naturally sequences bloom times as pollinators fly through. Side yards also provide undisturbed ground conditions that 70 percent of native bees need for nesting.

How to achieve this look

Plant a succession of native wildflowers from front to back: early spring (columbine, phlox), early summer (wild bergamot, coneflower), midsummer (bee balm, liatris), and late season (aster, goldenrod). Leave patches of bare, south-facing soil for ground-nesting bees. Add native bunch grasses for overwintering habitat.

Try Free

Arden renders your side yard as a blooming pollinator corridor, showing the bloom succession from front to back.

JR

"Saved thousands on landscaping fees. The AI suggestions matched my climate zone perfectly."

-- James R.

★★★★★ 4.8 · Free · No account needed
Trusted by 200K+ gardeners
Featured in TechCrunch· Product Hunt· Better Homes & Gardens· Garden Design

Häufige Fragen

Q1 Is a side yard too narrow for a pollinator garden?

Even a 2-foot-wide strip of native wildflowers provides meaningful pollinator forage.

Q2 Will ground-nesting bees in my side yard be a problem?

Ground-nesting native bees are solitary and extremely docile — they rarely sting even when handled.

Q3 How do I maintain a pollinator side yard?

Mow or cut back once in late winter. Leave all stems standing through winter. Do not use pesticides.

Free on iOS & Android

Bereit, deinen Außenbereich neu zu gestalten?

Lade Arden kostenlos herunter — sieh deinen Garten in Sekunden verwandelt.

No credit card. No signup. Just results.

200K+ gardeners
★★★★★ 4.8 out of 5 · 8K+ ratings