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How Gardening With Native Plants Helps Texans Live in Rhythm With Nature

  • Writer: PBMG
    PBMG
  • 7 days ago
  • 3 min read

By Mary Sirgo, Permian Basin Master Gardeners

 

It’s 2016 in Lubbock, Texas, and the sky has fallen, blanketing the ground in bright white snow. Younger and disinclined to prepare for even the mildest of weather, I found myself without food in the house and hungry. After layering up in my warmest clothes, I set out on foot to the nearest grocery store. Major roads had been cleared for business, but driving out of my neighborhood wasn’t in the cards. As I walked a quiet route, unencumbered by busy traffic, professional deadlines, or technological distractions, I thought to myself, shouldn’t things be like this more often?

 

In modern society, it can be difficult to distinguish necessity from symptoms of a culture of convenience. There is a balance to be struck between aligning ourselves with the rhythms of the natural world and advancing technologies that keep people safe and well. When we seek to reorient ourselves toward a more harmonious relationship with nature, gardening offers a familiar and accessible place to begin.

 

It may feel easier to select a plant from a big box store and trust that it is well-suited for the area, or to install a known invasive plant because it keeps landscapes looking tidy, even in the dead of winter. After all, explaining why a garden looks native and natural can feel harder than maintaining uniformity. That is, until those momentary conveniences compound into long-term ecological consequences.

 

So, what does it actually mean to live in better rhythm with the natural world when it comes to our gardens?

 

For most home gardeners, it does not look like perfection. It looks like working within constraints. Limited time. Limited budgets. Rules set by homeowners’ associations. Unpredictable weather. A desire for beauty alongside a need for practicality. These realities are not failures of commitment. They are simply the context we garden in.

 

In Texas, where drought, heat, and sudden cold snaps shape what survives, the most sustainable choice is often the one that works with local conditions instead of fighting them. That might mean replacing a thirsty lawn with native groundcovers over time, choosing plants that tolerate temperature swings, or allowing parts of the garden to rest through winter rather than forcing constant tidiness.

 

There is also a learning curve. Many of us were taught that a “good” garden is neat, evergreen, and instantly gratifying. Shifting toward native and ecological gardening asks for patience and a willingness to be a beginner again. Plants may look sparse at first. Pollinators may arrive before our confidence does. And that’s okay.

 

If rethinking your garden feels overwhelming, start small. Meaningful change doesn’t require a full landscape overhaul. Choose one bed, one corner, or even one container to experiment with native or well-adapted plants. Allow winter to be what it is. Leave seed heads, grasses, and leaf litter in place where possible. Dormancy is not neglect. It is part of the cycle.

 

Gardens don’t exist in isolation. What we plant in our own yards influences the spaces around us, from neighborhood streets to shared waterways. When one person chooses native plants, pollinators benefit. When several neighbors do, entire habitat corridors begin to form. Community gardens and shared spaces turn individual choices into collective impact.

 

This season, consider slowing down just enough to notice what your garden is asking for, rather than what culture expects it to look like. You don’t have to do everything at once. Sometimes the smallest shift is enough to change the direction of a landscape.

 

Gardening has always been a conversation between people and place. When we listen more closely, we find that harmony isn’t something we invent. It’s something we return to.

To connect with your local Permian Basin Master Gardeners and discuss gardening in West Texas, call the AgriLife office in Odessa at 498-4071 or in Midland at 686-4700. Additional information is available at westtexasgardening.org.

OUR MISSION

The Permian Basin Master Gardener program is designed to support the Texas AgriLife Extension Service and provide horticultural training to Permian Basin Citizens.

CONTACT

Midland County Extension

2445 E Hwy 80

Midland, TX 79706
 

432-686-4700

https://midland.agrilife.org/contact/

Ector County Extension

1010 E 8th Street

Odessa, TX 79761

432-498-4071

https://ector.agrilife.org/

contact/

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