Bird’s Garden

$4.99

This garden is a haven for birds, featuring a diverse array of super blooming flowers, a lush privacy hedge, and a tranquil bird bath. The tall white hydrangeas, sages, and daisies add texture and color, creating the perfect nook for birdwatching and relaxation.

The Planting Plan PDF shows the garden bed layout with specific plant names, quantities, placement, and dimensions.

Environmental Requirements
Size  9’x9′, ~52 sf
USDA Zones 4-9
Light  Full Sun–Partial Shade
Soil Type  Loam; Well-Drained
pH  Acidic

SKU: 06B-014 Category:

Description

See this design in 3D and even augmented reality (AR)

Explore the garden below or see it in your yard using the AR icon at the lower right. AR experience is available on mobile devices only.

For AR help, click here.

Shop the Plants

Buy these plants online or at your local nursery.

Little Lime®
Panicle Hydrangea
Buy: 3
Becky
Shasta Daisy
Buy: 2
May Night
Salvia
Buy: 6

This Kit Includes

  • Hydrangea paniculata ‘Jane Little Lime’ (Little Lime panicle hydrangea) Like all panicle hydrangeas, Jane Little Lime is easy to grow, producing flowers on old and new shoots. Neat and clean in spring, this medium shrub emerges with green leaves and forms green flowers that fade into cream midsummer, and mature into deep pink or maroon by later summer or fall. This flower looks great paired with dark foliage or anything with a hint of rose.
  • Leucanthemum superbum ‘Becky’ (Becky shasta daisy) This cut-and-come-again daisy brings loads of mid to late summer joy to the garden. Great for cut flowers and a centerpiece in the perennial bed, this plant is as dependable as it is flowerful as long as you keep it out of soggy soil. It is pollinated by bees, wasps, flies, butterflies, and beetles but toxic to pets.
  • Salvia x sylvestris ‘May Night’ (May Night wood sage) Another mint family favorite, this aromatic herb is well suited for the leading edge of a dry garden where it can attract bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds en masse. Also known as ‘Mainacht’, this early summer bloomer exhibits rich, fuzzy, violet-blue spikes alongside the catmints, yarrows, and early daylilies. This plant can be deadheaded to intersecting branches for repeat blooms with moderate effort or cut down to basal growth for rejuvenation.