
Why native gardening is on the rise in San Antonio
Why it matters: Yards and gardens filled with native species can withstand the city's increasing heat and ongoing drought, conserving water while adding a beautiful touch to neighborhoods.
Native plants also help attract pollinators and restore ecosystems, and they're easier to maintain.
State of play: When Drake White opened The Nectar Bar in Leon Valley in 2023, it was the city's first nursery solely dedicated to native species.
It was followed by Pollinatives, on the Northeast Side, shortly after.
Zoom in: White tells Axios that The Nectar Bar began as a landscaping company in 2014. She specialized in pollinator gardens, but soon realized that certain native host plants needed for butterflies to lay eggs weren't available.
She started growing those plants herself. Then came the influx of customers that led to the nursery's opening.
The big picture: The San Antonio chapter of the Native Plant Society of Texas says interest in native landscaping "is rapidly growing," which White has also seen.
The San Antonio Water System this year increased the value of its WaterSaver Landscape Coupons, offering $125 per coupon to replace grass with drought-tolerant plants, which includes native ones.
What they're saying: Such programs have "helped push the understanding and the drive for native plants," White says.
She also thinks people's understanding of native gardens has grown, as they see it can be much more than cacti in a rock garden.
How it works: Native gardens don't all look the same. Some neighborhoods are filled with tall wildflowers and a "no-mow" vibe that White calls a prairie look, while others are more manicured.
The key is not to overwater. Native plants "kind of take care of themselves," White says.
The "no-fail" native species she suggests — which can work even in a pot on an apartment balcony — are:
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
9 hours ago
- Axios
Ga. State to demolish nearly 100-year-old building in MLK Historic District
More than two months after a tense public hearing on a proposal to demolish a nearly 100-year-old building for its campus expansion project, Georgia State University will move ahead with tearing down the building. Why it matters: The old substation at 148 Edgewood Ave. is within the local Martin Luther King Jr. Historic District, and preservationists say demolishing such structures will make it harder to tell Atlanta's history through those spaces. The latest: The university confirmed to Axios that "after careful evaluation and public input," it will tear down the "long-vacant" building to construct what it calls a Fraternity and Sorority Life Plaza. The plaza will serve as greenspace for students who reside in its Greek life housing development. A mural will also be installed to honor the history of the building and celebrate Greek groups on campus, GSU said. What they're saying: GSU added it will salvage the brickwork from 148 Edgewood and incorporate it into the new space "as a tribute to its legacy." It also said the $12 million estimate to renovate 148 Edgewood for reuse "outweighs its limited ability to benefit students and faculty." The other side: David Y. Mitchell, executive director of the Atlanta Preservation Center and an opponent of GSU's plan, said in a statement to Axios that his organization hoped GSU would have given the building "the respect it has both earned and been recognized with." "Destroying this building will remove yet one more of the structures that somehow survived and visually represents how we became Atlanta." Catch up quick: Residents and historic preservationists began raising concerns about GSU's plans last year and created a petition to raise awareness. A contentious public hearing and open house was held May 28 where GSU officials and Greek life students debated with residents and other stakeholders whether to reuse or demolish 148 Edgewood. Zoom out: Demolishing the old substation, as well as Sparks Hall at 33 Gilmer St., is part of GSU's larger, long-range plan to create a " true college town downtown." A Panther Quad, which will rise in place of Sparks Hall, will feature additional greenspace that will connect to the campus' existing greenway. Gilmer Street will be transformed into a car-free zone to improve connectivity with Hurt Park, GSU officials previously told Axios. Flashback: The 148 Edgewood building was constructed as a substation in 1926 by the company now known as Georgia Power to supply electricity to Downtown, Kyle Kessler, a resident who opposes the demolition, told Axios last year.


Axios
18 hours ago
- Axios
The do's and don't of dog throwing away poop
If you throw your bagged dog poop into a neighbor's trash cart, there's a good chance you've made them mad — perhaps enough to get a tongue lashing or worse: a reciprocal bag on your doorsteps. Why it matters: We take etiquette seriously here at Axios Twin Cities, digging deep into the biggest wedge issues in Minnesota, like shoes at house parties, free sampling of ice cream, how early is too early to mow your lawn and merging onto I-94. Friction point: The question we posed last week about dog waste really got people fired up. We received nearly 100 reader responses to this one. It's easy to see why it's such an issue. A 2022 city study found that Minneapolis' population of 112,000 dogs generates 15,340 tons of waste annually. Extrapolate those figures to the metro area, which has 8.7 times more people (and likely dogs), and we're talking about 133,500 tons of poo per year. This stuff has to go somewhere. The big picture: A majority of you said dumping it in a neighbor's bin is disrespectful and makes for a stinky cart. But a sizable number also said they're OK if someone's bagged dog poop ends up in their bin, especially if it's out on the curb on trash day, before the garbage truck arrives. Threat level: A City of Minneapolis spokesperson tells Axios that putting any kind of trash in someone else's cart is considered illegal dumping. And pet waste in your own bin is required to be double-bagged to protect garbage workers. Here's what readers say about the issue: If Bob A. from Mahtomedi can't find a public can, "I use anyone's trash can that is close to the road that I am walking on. My trash container is welcome to everyone ... better there than on the ground!" Max L. used to live in Chicago, and he said it was the norm to throw your bag into the first can you saw (our Axios Chicago colleague Carrie Shepherd confirmed this). But when Max and his wife did it here in Minneapolis, an irate neighbor came out of their house screaming. It was even worse for Bronson L. of St. Paul, whose husband once threw a tightly tied bag of dog poop into a stranger's can. A man who saw him do it followed Bronson home, and a few weeks later, threw a bag of poop onto his front steps. Ellen P. does what many Minnesotans do: bottles up her frustration, even when seven days' worth of poop bags pile up in her St. Paul can. "I am just passive aggressive and complained about it and now I am sharing the story with Axios." Oren S. grew up in St. Louis Park but lives in Toronto, where he says public garbage cans are everywhere, providing convenient places to deposit the bags. "Minneapolis needs to invest in more public trash bins!"


Axios
3 days ago
- Axios
Leaving dog poop in a neighbor's bin? It's a legal gray area
Most rational Miamians agree that picking up after your dog is a pet owner's basic duty. But can you legally dispose of that doodie in your neighbor's trash can? The rules vary from city to city. Why it matters: The dog poop debate has divided our readers, so we went digging for answers. Catch up quick: People opposed to letting dog owners leave poop bags in residential trash bins say it violates their private property rights and could be a slippery slope to more serious illegal dumping. Those in favor argue that the expanded access to trash cans will help keep neighborhoods free of feces and doesn't hurt anyone if the trash is already wheeled out for pickup. In an Axios poll, a majority of respondents said they dropped their poop bags off in public waste bins or at their own homes. What we found: We asked Miami-Dade County and the cities of Miami, Miami Beach and Coral Gables what is allowed. 🚫 Miami-Dade: County code says it's "generally prohibited to dispose of waste in someone else's residential garbage container without the property owner's permission," spokesperson Jennie Lopez says. "This includes items such as bagged dog waste." The code applies to unincorporated Miami-Dade and the cities that receive county trash services, like Doral, Miami Gardens and Pinecrest. Yes, but: Robert Vargas, a spokesperson for the county's waste management department, tells Axios the county prioritizes the enforcement of more serious illegal dumping, like the improper disposal of mattresses and tires. "This isn't something that we really actively enforce. Normally, it's a neighbor-to-neighbor type of thing," Vargas said, adding that the county doesn't receive many complaints about poop bag disposal. Penalty: a $250 fine. 🚫 Miami Beach: " The action of someone placing their trash in another's trash can may be construed as illegally disposing/dumping your trash and that can be cited," city spokesperson Melissa Berthier wrote in an email. Penalty: a $500 fine for a first offense and $1,000 for subsequent offenses, per city code. ✅ City of Miami: There are no laws that ban throwing out trash in a neighbor's bin, per spokesperson Kenia Fallat. 🚫 Coral Gables: The city last year banned throwing out dog poop in the trash pits, reserved for lawn clippings and bulky waste, that are located on the swales in front of some single-family homes.