HomeGrown Organics

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Homegrown Organics is a sustainably minded landscaping company trying to rid Seattle of leaf blowers, obnoxious gas-powered tools, and support the sustainable agriculture revolution in Seattle.

While most of my work is on Vashon Island, I still do design projects in the greater region and installed this  garden l...
05/27/2026

While most of my work is on Vashon Island, I still do design projects in the greater region and installed this garden last year in Seattle. It is unashamedly romantic and Rose-filled, and I love it! Complete with a colorful and low-maintenance parking strip.

05/09/2026

Dragonfly: One of 5,000 good reasons I can give you to build a small wetland or pond. From $100 - $1M, you can magic something magical at any price.

05/04/2026

Ranunculus aconitifolius šŸ¤

I grow this near my pond, where it gets that perfect mix of moisture and dappled light. It has a more refined look than most things that like wet feet—soft, divided foliage and those clean white flowers that almost float above everything else.

I picked this one up from Keeping It Green Nursery, and it’s settled in effortlessly.

Blooms in late spring/early summer, right when a lot of the garden is still warming up. It quietly does its thing without asking for much, but always gets comments when it’s in flower.

Etymology: Ranunculus comes from Latin for ā€œlittle frog,ā€ a nod to how many species grow in damp places. Aconitifolius means ā€œwith leaves like Aconitumā€ (monkshood), referring to that finely cut foliage.

If you’ve got a damp edge or a spot that never quite dries out, this one’s worth a look.

Iris innominataFrom the Greek ἶρις (Ć®ris) → ā€œrainbowā€ 🌈Named after the messenger goddess Iris. And then… innominataLatin...
05/02/2026

Iris innominata

From the Greek ἶρις (Ć®ris) → ā€œrainbowā€ 🌈
Named after the messenger goddess Iris.

And then… innominata
Latin for ā€œunnamed.ā€

A little unfair to such a beauty.

—

This one’s native to southwestern Oregon and northwestern California.

It’s part of the Pacific Coast iris group, and used a lot in generating the ā€˜Pacific Coast hybrids’.

—

Gravel garden install, one year in reflections. I’ve been wanting to try this for a while—inspired by the gravel gardens...
04/30/2026

Gravel garden install, one year in reflections.

I’ve been wanting to try this for a while—inspired by the gravel gardens of Beth Chatto in England. The idea is to put down a really thick layer of 5/8ā€ gravel so w**d seeds just wash down through the gaps instead of sitting on soil and sprouting.

it is in a spot with lots of sun and not many overhead trees with lots of leaf drop.

So far it’s doing exactly what it’s supposed to. Very little w**ding. Almost no maintenance.

When we first planted it, it honestly just looked like a giant field of gravel with some plants dropped in. But even after a year it’s already starting to knit together. I’m guessing by next year it’ll read as a pretty lush, filled-in garden with gravel paths or pads—when in reality the whole thing is gravel.

One of the best parts has been how people use it. Kids in the neighborhood run right through it, cutting across, actually interacting with the space. It’s held up great.

Planting is a loose mix of drought-tolerant faves:
Jerusalem sage, manzanita, California buckwheat, salvias, Atlas fescue, Santa Barbara daisy, plus herbs like sage and thyme tucked throughout.

Stay tuned. Anyone else attempted this?

Accidental selfie!
04/27/2026

Accidental selfie!

04/18/2026

Planted a young Ubame oak (Quercus phillyreoides) this week for a client—one of my favorite small evergreen oaks grown by .

Native to Japan, it grows into an attractive shrub with small evergreen leaves that emerge reddish in spring. The largest specimens I’ve seen are at the UW Botanical Garden in the Oak Garden.

What makes it stand out:
• Excellent drought tolerance once established
• Takes pruning well
• Handles urban conditions better than most oaks
• Year-round structure without the bulk of larger species

Sourced from Cistus Nursery, which continues to be one of the best spots for interesting, climate-appropriate oaks and west coast-adapted plants.

cistusnursery gardenstructure urbangarden plantsforthefuture oaklover westcoastplants

Working on Pines yesterday. This garden has some beautiful water and hardscape and overlooks the Sound.
04/17/2026

Working on Pines yesterday. This garden has some beautiful water and hardscape and overlooks the Sound.

04/10/2026

Stumbled into one of those spots that makes you stop for a second out at Twin Harbors.

At first glance it looks like a marsh—but it’s actually a coastal dune slack with Pinus contorta var. contorta (shore pine) growing right through a matrix of Carex obnupta (slough sedge).

There’s standing water in places, but the ground is more like a sponge than a pond. The sedge builds up a soft, peaty layer, and the pines are rooted just high enough to handle it.

These trees didn’t wander into a wet spot—they’ve been part of this system for a long time. This is one of those in-between landscapes: not quite forest, not quite marsh.

Kind of wild to see a pine woodland thriving where your boots start to sink.

plantcommunity

Address

Seattle, WA
98070

Opening Hours

Tuesday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Wednesday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Thursday 8:30am - 4:30pm
Friday 8:30am - 4:30pm

Telephone

+12064988785

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