Let Your Garden Grow Wild | Rebecca McMackin | TED

296,461 views ・ 2024-03-29

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:03
So full disclosure,
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I am the nerdiest gardener you are ever going to meet.
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(Laughter)
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Technically, I'm an ecological horticulturalist,
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which is a fancy way of saying that I design and manage gardens
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that are extravagantly beautiful
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while also providing habitat for plant populations,
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wildlife communities and even soil organisms.
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And you might wonder, isn't that what all gardeners do?
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Unfortunately, no.
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The vast majority of gardens are ecological deserts, and in fact,
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an incredible amount of environmental damage has been done
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in the name of making pretty gardens.
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In the US alone,
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we dump over 100 million pounds of insecticides,
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herbicides and synthetic fertilizers on our lawns and gardens every year.
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There just isn't a garden pretty enough to be worth all of that,
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and the reality is that it's completely unnecessary.
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Gardens and landscapes that are absolutely gorgeous
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can also help the world around us.
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They can provide food, water,and shelter to wildlife.
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Gardens can and have brought back plants and animals from the brink of extinction.
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There is a movement happening all over the globe.
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Gardeners, garden designers, landscape architects,
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even entire cities are finding ways to beautify our environment
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while making space for the animals we share this land with.
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I've seen biodiversity return to one of the toughest places to live
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on the entire planet:
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the middle of New York City,
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(Laughter)
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where I cared for, designed
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and helped build public parks and gardens.
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(Applause)
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At Brooklyn Bridge Park, where I was director of horticulture,
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we took these massive derelict shipping piers out over the water
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between Brooklyn and Manhattan
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and turned them into an 85-acre post-industrial public park.
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(Applause)
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It was designed by MVVA and built out over a decade.
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And it's hard to imagine now,
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but this lush landscape was built on parched concrete.
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This is about as appealing to wildlife as a parking lot.
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And yet, just a few years after construction,
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we welcomed migratory birds,
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rare insects and clouds of butterflies,
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all among millions and millions of park visitors.
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When people go to Brooklyn Bridge Park,
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they're usually there to play basketball or have a picnic.
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They have no idea that they're walking through a monarch habitat
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or a firefly sanctuary.
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It just reads as a beautiful park with lots of butterflies
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and magical evenings.
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And if we can do that in the middle of New York City,
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amidst all that traffic and concrete,
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you can do it anywhere.
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Indeed, we must incorporate habitat everywhere immediately,
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especially in our cities.
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We are facing a biodiversity crisis of catastrophic proportions.
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We're changing the planet so quickly that plants and animals cannot keep up.
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You may have heard of the insect apocalypse,
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and unfortunately it is just as terrifying as it sounds.
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We have lost nearly half of insects on planet Earth
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just since I was a little kid.
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Now, you might not like bugs,
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but they are still keeping you alive.
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One in every three bites of food that you eat
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is the direct result of insect pollination.
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And this isn't just a problem for humanity.
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Where we have the data,
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we've lost a quarter of our birds.
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In North America, it's 29 percent.
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Most of these birds feed their babies exclusively on insects.
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So it's not just climate change that we need to solve right now.
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There is some existential multitasking required of us.
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Thank goodness that there are solutions
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and many of them literally involve planting flowers.
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So let's talk about gardening for biodiversity,
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because while you might not be a gardener,
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I am still going to ask you to get your hands dirty.
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All it takes is a pot on your stoop to have a positive effect.
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The first thing we should all be doing are planting plants
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that are from the places where we're gardening.
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We call them native plants,
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and they're important because they evolved alongside of the wildlife there.
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Plants and animals often form relationships
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and even dependencies on each other.
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For example,
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the eastern red columbine
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is arguably the most cheerful of our spring wildflowers.
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But of course they're not blooming for us.
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Their red flower heralds the return of the ruby-throated hummingbird,
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the East Coast's only hummingbird.
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After these tiny birds have flown thousands of miles
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on their migration from Central America to the northeast,
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they rely on the sugary nectar of the columbine to refuel,
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and they have reason to believe
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that this flower will be waiting for them when they do.
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The Columbine stores their nectar at the end of long spurs,
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where only the long tongues of the hummingbird can reach it.
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As the bird drinks the nectar, they pollinate the flower.
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Both organisms are benefiting here,
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and in fact, the ruby-throated hummingbird
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is the eastern red columbine's pollinator partner.
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The bird and the flower could not be more charming,
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but it's the dynamics between the two where the real magic resides.
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Let me explain.
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Birds have an extra photoreceptor
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that allows them to see red incredibly well.
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Flowers have taken advantage of this
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and use the color red to communicate.
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As the hummingbirds fly over land on their journey,
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a wave of red flowers blooms to greet them.
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This beautiful dance of symbiosis is happening all around us,
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among plants and animals that have evolved together for thousands,
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if not millions of years.
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In return for planting native plants,
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we get a front-row seat to the wonders of the natural world.
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It's hard work,
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but it's the best kind because at the end of our efforts,
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not only do we get biodiversity but we get butterflies.
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When butterflies visit flowers, they're there for a quick drink of nectar.
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But if we want to support their full life cycle,
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we need to provide them with food when they are very hungry caterpillars.
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Caterpillars eat leaves, but they can't just eat any leaf.
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They need the leaves they have evolved to digest.
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Monarchs and milkweed are the most famous duo,
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but every butterfly and moth has a plant or even a few
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that they lay their eggs on.
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These are their host plants.
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At Brooklyn Bridge Park a while ago,
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I saw American lady butterflies visiting our flowers.
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So I looked up their host plants
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and found that their favorite was a tiny white flower
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called pearly everlasting.
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So I ordered a few,
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hoping that the butterflies would eventually find them.
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However, when I opened the box,
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it was like butterflies just materialized out of thin air
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and went straight for the pearly everlasting.
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We had to brush the butterflies off the plants
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just to get them in the ground.
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Now I know that it might be a shock for some of you to hear
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that people like me want insects eating our garden plants.
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But even bugs we refer to as pests can be important for biodiversity.
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Long ago at Brooklyn Bridge Park, our catalpa trees got covered in aphids.
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They are a common garden pest
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that suck the sugary liquid out of leaves.
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People encouraged me to spray them with pesticides, but I didn't.
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And the following year we found the two-spotted lady beetle
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on our catalpas.
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This was the first sighting of this ladybug in New York City
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in 30 years.
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(Applause)
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And the thing about them is that they eat those tiny aphids
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that are on our catalpas.
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So if we had sprayed the trees,
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we would have harmed the ladybugs as well.
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Gardening is a long game.
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With patience, we can return balance to these systems.
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When we allow pests to live in our gardens,
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predators like ladybugs will soon move in.
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By building up biodiversity,
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pests are kept at bay.
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Most gardeners try to maintain these clean, sterile environments
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that are the exact opposite of what wildlife wants.
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The more we can stop being tidy,
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the more wildness we can bring into our gardens and landscapes,
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the better habitat we provide.
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Wherever possible, we should stop mowing.
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Why not get rid of your lawn?
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Or shrink it drastically.
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Lawns should be area rugs, not wall-to-wall carpet.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Leaves that fall to the ground should be left there.
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They're literally called leaves.
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We should leave them.
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(Laughter)
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Bumblebees nest in those leaves, birds will forage in them,
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and butterflies overwinter in them as well.
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Seed heads can be sculptural while feeding the birds,
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and old flower stems can be tucked away to allow tiny bees to nest in them.
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All of these practices create new looks for our gardens,
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but part of this work is changing our ideas of beauty.
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Traditional gardens were often about displaying control over nature.
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But we no longer wear powdered wigs and hoop skirts.
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We don't need to be authoritarian in our garden design.
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(Laughter)
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And it's not all or nothing.
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There's almost always space on our land where we can go a little wild.
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The rose mallow is this tropical-looking hibiscus
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that grows throughout eastern North America.
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The stems are often cut down by gardeners in spring,
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but we left them up one year
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because we found that there were a bunch of beneficial insects
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that used those stems.
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And what we ended up with, I find absolutely stunning.
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It might not be a look for every garden,
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but certainly we can find space for it.
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Because a few weeks later,
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we found a song sparrow nest nestled in between those uncut stems.
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And soon we had baby song sparrows hopping around outside of the garden.
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There's a direct link between that garden practice
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and an actual baby bird.
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In these scary times,
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it can be so hard to know what to do and how to help.
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But it feels great to cultivate life with your own two hands.
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And there's an abundance of research now to show how beneficial gardening is
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for our health and even our happiness.
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Because we all deserve to live in a healthy and thriving ecosystem.
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But it feels even better when we're part of those systems,
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supporting the plants and pollinators around us
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the way that they support us.
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Like many of you,
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I am at times immobilized with climate grief,
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thinking about the world that we're leaving for our children.
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But gardening, honestly, brings me so much hope
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that we can solve some very big,
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very serious problems, that we have the solutions already.
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And many of them simply involve planting flowers.
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Thank you so much.
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(Applause and cheers)
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