Welcome!

Green Justine's Gardening is a Bay Area gardening business owned by Justine Schwartz. We specialize in organic gardening using native and drought tolerant plants. Green Justine's offers garden maintenance, design, and consultation.

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Garden Photos

After a record-setting rainy winter the spring gardens are glorious here in Berkeley!
Here are a few photos from some of my gardens.  There is little that gives me more joy than seeing fiddleheads emerge on ferns.  And forming a heart shape no less <3

 The Fish House; a Berkeley gem!



 Morning sunlight on a newly blooming clematis.
 Combinations!


 Dry garden that used to be a lawn not so long ago.


Thursday, June 19, 2014

What to plant?

I specialize in drought tolerant and native gardens.  I often use a blend of native and non-native plants to expand the palette to include more color and texture in my gardens.  One of my gardens has intense clay soil that I have slowly worked over the years.  It also has so many deer that they have taken over the lawn for a friendly game of croquet.  I have managed this garden for nearly a decade so I have had a lot of time to experiment with plants that meet these criteria:
1. Provide color
2. Has interesting foliage or bloom
3.  Is drought tolerant
4. Resists deer* (Doe will try anything, also all deer love juicy new nursery plants)
5. Handles heavy soil

Here are a few images from this garden.




And a list of some current favs in no particular order:
Rock rose (many types)
Leucodendron
Salvia (many types)
Pennisetum orientale
Kangaroo paw
Lavender
Coleonema 'sunset gold'
Ribes sanguineum "claremont" *sometimes gets nibbled
Berberis (a beautiful plant, very thorny, not so fun for a gardener)
Pierris 'silver flame'
Bacopa
Nepeta (otherwise known as catnip.  deer disdain it, but the neighborhood cats may attack)
Hakonechloa macra 'aureola' (Okay, this may be my favorite)
Ceanothus 'dark star'
Phormium (not a big love of mine, but very useful at times)
Foxglove
Douglas iris
Manzanita (most types)
Echium (I can't overstate it's usefulness on a dry slope)
Succulents -too many to name

This list could go on and on.  Actually there are many other resources wherein the list does go on and on.  Take heart, while the drought condition is bleak for California, plants can do amazing things in rough conditions.  Take a look at this one, the Ocotillo, from the Anza Borrego desert.

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Spring has sprung!

Flower garden in West Berkeley.  This is my home garden.  I planted it with my five year old daughter, Flora, in mind.  Like her, it is playful and colorful.  She spends much of her outdoor time harvesting flowers, using the petals as 'pixie dust'.  She grazes on the borage, nasturtium, blueberries, fruit trees, and more. This year we grew zinnias, sunflowers, and cosmos from seed to create a butterfly garden.  
Flora celebrates Spring


 
Borage volunteers year after year.

For the birds and the bee, borage and abutilon.

Borage, Abutilon, and CA poppies. 
Kerria japonica in full glory. 
Kerria up close 
Kerria and Ceanothus 'concha'


Loropetalum and Rhodedendron

Echium in full bloom

Friday, February 7, 2014