Los Angeles Times

FRIENDLY GARDEN

- BY JEANETTE MARANTOS

When Dave Ethington inherited his parents’ San Clemente home in 2015, it was part gift, part nightmare. ¶ The hilltop home had a spacious backyard with spectacula­r views of the ocean, so beautiful that Dave and his wife, Kris, were married there in 1989. But over the years, the yard had become overrun by juniper and ivy, while water kept pooling around the foundation, destabiliz­ing the clay soil and inviting termites to feast on the beams.

Luckily, by the time the Ethingtons took over the house, they had 18 years of equity in another San Clemente home. They soon realized they were going to need most of that $500,000 equity to stabilize the foundation, eliminate the termite damage (“One beam was so bad you could remove parts of it with your hands,” Dave said), reroute the water and remodel the house and yard.

Today, some interior work remains, but the foundation is well anchored to casons buried deep in the ground, dry wells and a backyard “creek bed” are routing water away from the house, and the yard is landscaped almost exclusivel­y in colorful native plants, making it a magnet for pollinator­s and garden tours, and the first-place winner of Orange County’s 2018 California Friendly Garden contest. Why only native plants? “I blame the butterflie­s,” said Kris, who oversaw the landscapin­g while Dave focused on building the new deck and other woodworkin­g around their house.

When their two children were young, she said, the family became fascinated by the life cycle of butterflie­s. She joined the San Clemente Garden Club and the California Native Plant Society to discover the best ways to attract them to her yard.

“I learned if you plant the right host plants, bees and butterflie­s will come,” she said, and all it takes is a glance around her yard to confirm that. The Ethingtons’ landscape is teeming with beneficial insects and birds, attracted by the abundant blooms of natives such as buckwheats, salvias, mallows and milkweed, the favored food of monarch caterpilla­rs.

There were practical considerat­ions too. Going native meant the Ethingtons didn’t need to install a sprinkler system. The plants needed some regular watering to get establishe­d when they were first planted late in 2016, but the homeowners now just hand water every three weeks when it’s hot, Kris said, and stop watering entirely when the weather turns cool.

The dry wells and creek bed provide another water source. Being so near the ocean, they have a lot of dewy run-off from the roof that used to pool around the foundation, Dave said. Now they have rain gutters that direct the moisture to undergroun­d dry wells dug 2 feet wide and 3 feet deep, filled with permeable landscapin­g fabric and rocks. The wells allow the water to slowly seep into the garden, encouragin­g the plants to send their roots deep into the ground to find that moisture.

When they get a heavy rain and the wells get full, undergroun­d overflow pipes carry the water to the drainage ditch in the street, reducing erosion in the hilly yard.

The Ethingtons’ yard “is an extraordin­ary example of a lowwater, climate-appropriat­e and wildlife-friendly garden, said Ron Vanderhoff, general manager of Roger’s Gardens in Corona del Mar and creator of Orange County’s California Friendly Garden Contest, which drew nearly 60 entries this year.

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 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? THE ETHINGTONS have replaced their lawn with native landscapin­g, earning them first place in Orange County’s 2018 California Friendly Garden Contest.
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times THE ETHINGTONS have replaced their lawn with native landscapin­g, earning them first place in Orange County’s 2018 California Friendly Garden Contest.
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 ??  ?? AMONG THE CHANGES to the property are a koi pond, water plant included, at the edge of a deck made of wood, top. Pollinatin­g insects, including butterf lies, middle, have been attracted to the new landscapin­g. In the backyard, there’s a patch of dog-friendly artificial turf — and that view.
AMONG THE CHANGES to the property are a koi pond, water plant included, at the edge of a deck made of wood, top. Pollinatin­g insects, including butterf lies, middle, have been attracted to the new landscapin­g. In the backyard, there’s a patch of dog-friendly artificial turf — and that view.

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