N AT I V E P L A N T S C A P E S
Happy to Be Here
SWAMPFLY LANDSCAPING BUILDS PARADISES FOR BUTTERFLIES, SNAKES, AND YOU, TOO Story and photos by Lucie Monk Carter
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or my next new yearâs resolution, Iâm vowing to treat all my loved ones like dirt. Or at least how the women of Swampfly Landscaping treat dirt. They embrace and enrich dirt. They fill a yard with plants that want to be there, and restore nitrogen, oxygen, and bacteria to the depleted earth. âYouâre typically boosting the soil when you use native plants,â said co-owner Ashlee Brackeen. âEspecially in Louisiana, we need the bacteria and oxygen in the soil to be at its healthiest state because it needs to absorb the water.â Brackeen and fellow Swampflies Emily Pontiff and Caitlin Robbins understand that some clients fear a wild look in their yard (or a rat-a-tat-tat from the Homeowners Association). This is where the thoughtful designers come in, hand-drawing their visions for your little oasisâincorporating two, maybe three different plants. âThrough our designs, we can give people a good idea of how it can still look clean and formal if you implement these plants,â said Pontiff. âAnd also give you a little zest that maybe you needed.â Wordsworth had his host of daffodils, and you can have a heck-of-a-lotof echinacea. Planting a few species in abundance, or massing, creates a more sustainable garden over time. âThe number one thing people ask for, I would say, is low maintenance,â said Brackeen. âIf you do native plants and you do massing, you will inherently have a low maintenance property. They seed themselves. When this singular species takes over a 5x5 area, itâs going to look really goodâ even in its dormancy phaseâbecause it has a uniformity to it. With the reseeding, it makes them take up a lot of space, so eventually you donât have to remulch. They shade out weeds.â But there are clients who give Swampfly more creative freedom, too. âREPLACE MY LAWNâ blared one email inquiry. The client had a corner lot in New Orleans and mowed for hours each week. She worked from home and had recently moved her desk to have a view of her front yard. âAnd she was tired of what she had. She wanted something more,â said Pontiff. Though native plants werenât a specific request when she hired Swampfly, the client loved the way a passion vine they implemented fed a Gulf fritillary caterpillar. In the months that followed, âshe became our biggest believer,â said Pontiff. The front corner lot is now a certified native plant habitat, complete with a bat house. Sheâs even overheard neighbors
bring their own landscapers down the street to point out plants theyâd like in their yards. Swampfly often works with fellow nature lovers to increase the chances of encounters with favorite creatures. One woman in Lacombe hated to hear that her neighbors were killing harmless snakes that slithered onto their property. Swampfly built her a snake pit from the invasive tallow trees theyâd felled in her yard. Now thereâs an Eden in Lacombe: snakes welcome. As the Swampflies have discovered, it isnât all that difficult to advocate for a beautiful, beneficial flower. âWe had someone a while back who was getting a home built and had a very traditional Louisiana landscape designed,â said Brackeen. âWe put together a palate alternative for every single species proposed by the architect. We gave a native alternative that would have the same appearance, the same bloom time, and color.â âAnd it would be much more beneficial and low maintenance,â Robbins added. âMuch more suited to be down here.â Native plants have become no-brainers for many landscapers and their clients. Rick Webb owns the wholesale nursery Louisiana Growers, which supplies horticultural professionals like the folks at Swampfly. âWhenever people talk to me now, I canât help but sound like this curmudgeon,â laughed Webb. âIâve been in the native plant world for a long timeâ almost preaching to talk people into using native plants.â These days theyâre a key component in stormwater management projects, and Webb sees a renewed âawareness that we should do something to try to repair the damage that weâve done to the environment.â Swampfly eventually hopes to educate at a larger scale than one yard and a few neighbors at a time. The groupâs first official commercial project was designing the community garden for Wonderground, an under-construction cooperative arts venue in Old South Baton Rouge. Theyâre remediating the soil currentlyââItâs by the train tracks and was a dumping ground for tires,â said Brackeenâbut the garden will ultimately complement owner Cindy Wonderfulâs vision for a space where âanyone can be involved or perform hereâ by hosting specialty classes with friends (beekeeping, citrus tree pruning, etc.) and running a community pantry where a naĂŻf on native plants can pick up good soil and alluring seeds. I wandered through a couple of Swampfly clientsâ yards trying to hold onto all the plant names Robbins threw
Ashlee Brackeen, photographed by Alexandra Kennon in the yard of a client in New Orleans.
Top from left to right: Coreopsis tinctoria, or "Tickseed" and Echinacea purpurea, or "purple coneflower". Below: Oenothera lindheimeri, or "Butterfly Gaura," also known as "beeblossom" and purple coneflower in a Baton Rouge garden.
at me: phlox and iris, sea oats and lyreleaf sage. Earlier Iâd asked the group to name their favorites, because why labor over a Google image search and scrape up synonyms for pink when I can have someone who loves a flower describe it to me? Pontiff raved about the rudbeckia maxima. âItâs a large coneflower that has a blue-silver tinge to the leaf. They grow very tall. They have a tall cone and a droopier petal. I think theyâre striking. They do really well in the clay soil. Theyâre able to break it up and amend the soil, making it easier to absorb water. They get established pretty quickly and they are booming right now.â âThatâs a star. Itâs a showstopper,â Brackeen agreed. âItâs striking to behold,â said Robbins. âYou cannot deny the beauty of a native plant when youâre looking at the rudbeckia maxima,â said Brackeen. I asked Webb if he had a favorite native plant, and he said thatâs the wrong question. âDonât give me that one native plant. Diversity is important. Lots of things are essential. Weâre creating ecosystems.â The women of Swampfly agree: there
are no favorites when it comes to nurturing the environment. Some plans, like many oak species in North America, offer immense ecological value. âOthers have the unique ability to capture the imaginations of people previously unfamiliar with native plants,â said Brackeen. âOftentimes we find that itâs the really show-stopping, unique, visually striking plants ⊠that spark peopleâs imaginations, that excite them, and that help instill their trust in us to bring some magic into their spaces.â And itâs true. But itâs not just that surface beauty that Swampflyâs clientele cravesâitâs the company, too. âA lot of people get into that with milkweed,â said Brackeen. âFeeding the caterpillars and then watching the monarch come back. There are so many other critters to support.â âYou see them start to pop up,â said Pontiff, âthen you see the birds that want to eat these insects. You get into having this life around you. âYou watch everything become healthier,â said Robbins, âbecause you invested in it.â h
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