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Karin Ursula Landscapes

Beautiful garden and landscape design in the Hudson Valley

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native plants

Third Thursdays Environmental Series

August 12, 2024 by Karin Edmondson

A sense of wonder is the enemy of the imperial mind. –  Martin Prechtel

Nature is respite, Nature heals, Nature is welcoming of all Beings, so why then as gardeners do we still blindly follow old dictates and garden rules? Why garden in rigid black and white? Allow yourself the all-inclusive joy of a wild, expressive garden that is beautiful, biodiverse and healing.

Lead with your heart! Observe! Be curious! Cultivate a sense of wonder when meeting and working with all Beings who live on the Land. Do not be afraid of your garden or the plants in it; even those plants who humans label invasive offer us gifts of beauty and health.

Karin Ursula has an M.S. in Landscape Design from Columbia University, studied with Marguerite Uhlmann-Bower at Earth School in Delaware County, and works with plants in subtle and healing ways. As an ecological landscape designer for 15 years, Karin is known for cultivating biodiverse gardens in the Catskill Mountains alongside her beloved dogs Bella, Ollie, Arthur, and Suzie. Indigenous eco-philosophy authors such as Sherri Mitchell, Martin Prechtel, and Derrick Jensen continue to shape and form her relationship with plants, winged, four-footed and furry creatures and Mother Earth.

Please join me this Thursday August 15th at 630pm at the Third Thursdays Hudson Valley Environmental Series You Tube Channel. The Webinar is now up on the Third Thursdays You Tube Channel for viewing here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: gardening, native plants, plant communication

KUL Native Plant Pollinator Garden in DWELL Magazine

May 13, 2020 by Karin Edmondson

One of my favorite native plant gardens is featured this month in DWELL Magazine. In 2016 I designed and built this garden to be a soothing green on green, pollinator heaven using 98% native plant species that are deer resistant and major pollinator attractants.  The gardens were meant to enhance the extraordinary quality of the home – like a ship sailing through the forest. We used sedges as natural mulch and groundcover, bergamot bee balm, blunt-toothed mountain mint, prairie smoke, shrubby St. John’s Wort, sweetfern and fragrant sumac in a sea of native ornamental grasses: little bluestem, prairie dropseed, switchgrass and Indian grass. We also incorporated mosses, sedums, lowbush blueberry and ferns present on site to seamlessly merge the designed areas with the natural ecosystem.

As evidenced, native plant gardens are beautiful and life-sustaining.

Four years on, we still maintain this garden now mostly pulling out bee balm and mountain mint to transplant to other areas of the property. In July the bees are buzzing so loud, it is beautiful for my ears and my Soul to behold.

Dwell_KUL_BuenoHome

All photos: Pippa Drummond, courtesy of DWELL Magazine

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: catskills, native plants, pollinator gardens, pollinators

Member of the Ecological Landscape Alliance

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© 2020 Karin Ursula Edmondson.  All Rights Reserved.

Design by Stephanie Blackman Design  |  Photography by Mark Loete Photography