Growing Native

Growing native plants in your garden offers numerous benefits, including supporting local ecosystems, attracting pollinators, and reducing environmental impact. By understanding your garden’s conditions and selecting appropriate native species, you can create a thriving and sustainable garden.

There has been a lot of interest in growing native plants in recent year due to the fact that they are easy to care for, provide a habitat and food for wildlife, and help restore the ecosystem of your yard. Some believe that natives aren’t attractive, which is simply not the case. By including a variety of natives that bloom at different times and have multi-seasonal attributes, you can have a beautiful natural landscape year-round.

There are several wonderful examples of native plant species that have been purposefully planted in a few of the gardens on the 2025 Gardens of Uxbridge Tour. Those who experience the garden tour will also have an opportunity to speak to an authority on native plantings at one of the 8 featured gardens. In the Uxbridge area, we are also fortunate to have a garden centre dedicated to native plants – Native Plants in Claremont – as well as Richter’s Herbs who feature many interesting specimen plants.

To learn more about local native plants and the case for growing them in your garden, check out this CBC article.

Tribute to a fantastic garden

Long time Garden Tour volunteer Barb Pratt reminisces about one of the GTA’s greatest gardens.

“I was sorry to see that Marjorie Harris, gardening guru, author and columnist, is selling her house — and garden — in midtown Toronto. I have followed Marjorie’s writings and broadcasts over the years. I particularly enjoyed the stories of how she designed and developed her own exquisite garden.

A few years ago I needed a copy of her Botanica North America, but it was out of print. It’s a huge, comprehensive work, subtitled “An iIlustrated Guide to Our Native Plants, Their Botany, History, and the Way They Have shaped Our World”. I was so disappointed that it was unavailable, and another printing wasn’t planned, that I contacted Marjorie Harris to complain and sympathize. As it turned out, she had a few remaining copies in her possession, and would sell me one.

Down to Toronto I went, knocked on her door, and spent a delightful hour chatting with this  charming, voluble woman, and even touring the garden that was familiar to me from her books and photos. I’m so glad I saw the garden for real. Now I treasure the memory of my visit, and the inscription in my copy of Botanica North America:

“To Barbara — for the plants. Marjorie Harris”.

Create your own garden memories on the 28th annual Gardens of Uxbridge Tour. The countryside surrounding the heritage town of Uxbridge, Ontario offers up many hidden garden gems just like Marjorie Harris’ urban oasis.