A Courtyard of Local Wildflowers and Grasses
Enclosed walls and native plants create a private habitat garden that buzzes with life and requires almost no maintenance.
Why it works
A courtyard concentrates the sensory experience of a native garden into an intimate enclosed space. The walls create a warm, sheltered microclimate that extends the growing season. Because the courtyard is contained, maintenance is minimal.
How to achieve this look
Plant a low native grass matrix as the living floor. Add drifts of native wildflowers in clusters by bloom season. Place a large natural boulder with a scooped top as a birdbath. Train native honeysuckle or trumpet vine on the courtyard walls.
Arden visualizes how native plants fill your courtyard dimensions, showing seasonal color changes and vertical coverage.
"Finally an app that understands outdoor spaces. Every garden plan turned out beautiful."
-- Priya K.
Perguntas Frequentes
Q1 Is a courtyard too small for a meaningful native garden?
Even a 100-square-foot courtyard supports dozens of native species and attracts measurable pollinator activity.
Q2 Will courtyard walls block enough sun for native plants?
Many natives tolerate partial shade — wild columbine, wild ginger, and native ferns thrive in 3-4 hours of direct sun.
Q3 Do I need to water a native courtyard garden?
Water during the first growing season. After that, local rainfall is typically sufficient since the enclosed walls reduce wind exposure and evaporation.