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Plant a diverse mix of native wildflowers that are adapted to your region's climate and soil conditions. Choose species that attract pollinators like bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds.
Create a vibrant border around your garden or lawn by planting a mix of colorful wildflowers such as black-eyed Susans, coneflowers, cosmos, and bachelor's buttons.
Design a rock garden and intersperse it with low-growing wildflowers like creeping thyme, moss phlox, and alpine poppies. Rocks provide natural drainage and contrast to the delicate flowers.
Create a charming cottage garden filled with a mix of wildflowers, herbs, and cottage-style perennials like lavender, yarrow, foxgloves, and hollyhocks.
Plant a butterfly garden with a variety of nectar-rich wildflowers that attract butterflies throughout the season.
Mimic the natural beauty of a woodland floor by planting shade-tolerant wildflowers like woodland phlox, trilliums, ferns, and Virginia bluebells under the canopy of trees.
Design a garden specifically to attract and support pollinators by planting a diverse array of wildflowers such as bee balm, aster, goldenrod, and Joe Pye weed.
Convert a portion of your lawn into a wildflower meadow by sowing a mix of native grasses and wildflowers.
Plant a rain garden to capture and filter stormwater runoff while providing habitat for wildlife. Choose moisture-loving wildflowers like cardinal flower, swamp milkweed, and blue flag iris.
If space is limited, create a container garden filled with wildflowers. Use pots, window boxes, or hanging baskets to showcase a variety of wildflower species on your patio, balcony, or doorstep.