San Diego Union-Tribune

Handcrafte­d haven

Garden savvy, patience and help from family, friends turn neglected yard into budget-friendly habitat for birds, butterflie­s

- BY CARON GOLDEN

Iworld,n Jeanne Reutlinger’s gardening is an act of collaborat­ion with friends and neighbors — meaning you don’t need much of a budget at all to create a prize-winning front yard. In Reutlinger’s case, her garden is the 2022 WaterSmart Landscape Contest winner for the city of Escondido’s water district.

Reutlinger, now 85 and physically unable to do much gardening these days due to a back problem, took on the landscapin­g project in 2019 when she moved into her Escondido home at age 81. It was two years after the death of her husband Ron, following more than 50 years of marriage. The couple had lived for many decades in Crown Point and, years before, had bought two rental homes next door to one another in Escondido. Their daughter Diana Simpson, one of the Reutlinger­s’ four children, now lives in the second home, and both women have roommates.

Upon moving in, Reutlinger took on the project of creating a lush but low-maintenanc­e, low-water garden herself, with some help from Simpson and her son John, who lives on Palomar Mountain. It took her three years, putting to use all she had learned during her years of gardening at her Crown Point home and the mountain and desert cabins she and Ron had owned, as well as a childhood filled with gardening with both her mother and grandmothe­r.

THE INSPIRATIO­N

Reutlinger explained that when she moved into her Escondido home, the yard was full of weeds and neglect.

“It was baked by the hot sun and car exhaust from the nearby asphalt street,” she recalled. “Wanting to conserve water and create a natural, low-maintenanc­e habitat, I had a forlorn lawn full of weeds and ruts.”

Reutlinger was already having her driveway extended, so she asked the man doing the work if he could put his Bobcat to use on the front yard to scrape away the weeds, old tree roots and debris, which he did. He also provided a nice mound in one area to elevate some of the future plantings.

Now that it was cleared and shaped, Reutlinger could get a better sense of what she wanted to do — but she had no designer to lay it out, nor any plans at all. What she did have was a goal.

“I wanted to do my own planting and create a colorful waterwise garden to attract butterflie­s and small birds,” she explained. “I am 85 years old and did the flower, succulent, small shrub and groundcove­r planting myself over the past three years. It has been a continual work in progress.”

THE DETAILS

OK, Reutlinger has had help. Her grandson John helped her with the large plantings. And he contribute­d to the striking birdbath feature. “I told him I wanted a wood

stump as high as his waist to put my dish on for a birdbath,” she said. “He told me, ‘Oh my gosh, I’ve had one sitting around for years.’ So, he brought it and it was just right.

“A couple of weeks later he told me he found another piece. It’s more like a branch, and we poked it down a hole at the bottom of the stump. The smaller attached branches extend over the birdbath. Birds perch on it, sharpen their beaks on it a little. There are sometimes seven or eight birds in there just flapping around and taking their baths, and I can see it all from my kitchen window.”

Reutlinger barely went to a nursery. Instead, she’d take walks around the neighborho­od and if she saw plants she liked, she’d knock on the door and ask the residents if she could take clippings. Those clippings alone resulted in a lush groundcove­r of creeping myoporum, a perennial groundcove­r native to Australia. But it was time-consuming. She explained that she would sit on the ground and work a 3-foot-by-1½-foot area of ground, digging deep, adding soil conditione­rs, and watering well one day, followed by planting her starts and covering them loosely with the new soil the next day. And so it went until she made her way around the rest of the yard, keeping it moist daily, lugging her supplies with a old metal wagon.

Friends also contribute­d to her project, giving her birds of paradise and magenta bougainvil­lea, creeping rosemary and rock purslane. She also acquired a couple of Leyland cypress plants, red and yellow and pink lantana, a pink miniature rose bush, marigolds and California poppies. And Reutlinger’s favorite: giant yellow gazania daisies. In fact, the only original vegetation she kept were a couple of bushes against the house, below the kitchen window, and a massive juniper that had clearly been there for decades.

Where the mound had been created, Reutlinger placed the birdbath at the top, then added a variety of succulents, like jelly bean plants and mitre aloe, mixed in with the gazanias, zinnias, clouds of purple and white sweet alyssum, California poppies whose seeds she collects and flings throughout the garden, and flax lily standing above them. As a water-saving measure, she divided the mound into a few tiers progressin­g downward and installed curved scalloped brick edging to avoid runoff of water that came from rain or her hand watering. Throughout the mound and the rest of the garden are pieces of wood from Palomar Mountain that her grandson brought to her.

Reutlinger said the earth for each planting was supplement­ed with enriched potting soil to give nutrients and hold in the moisture. With a full sun exposure and a major street in front of the house, she said she had to be careful about planting some of the flowers close to the street since the asphalt from the street gives off a lot of heat. A bigger challenge, she admitted, are weeds and gophers.

“They’ve eaten a lot of flowers,” she said with a sigh. “I catch them with traps. Most of the weeds come after the rain, but I use a hula hoe to get rid of them.”

When it comes to Reutlinger’s passion for butterflie­s, she’s beyond dedicated. She basically has created a habitat of milkweed plants that volunteer around her front lawn and her backyard. At a recent visit, innumerabl­e yellow, black and white striped caterpilla­rs were fat and happy, munching on the leaves of the bushes, the seed-filled pods dense and about ready to burst open.

“I have been able to watch the full life cycle of the monarch from egg to growing caterpilla­r to chrysalis to beautiful adult butterfly right in my own yard,” she said.

“The many birds with their cheerful songs that enjoy my birdbath in the mornings are a delight,” she added. “I get many compliment­s from my neighbors who enjoy the beauty and color that my yard has added to our neighborho­od. It was once a bleak and barren corner and has now been transforme­d with a lot of love and enjoyment over the years into a waterwise habitat for birds and butterflie­s, and it gives smiles to all who pass by.

“Being outdoors in nature has many mental and physical health benefits that all of our bodies need. A garden is good for our soul and helps us connect with our Creator.”

COSTS

Reutlinger’s costs for her garden have been minimal. Her daughter estimates that, at most, she’s spent $250. Since she got a $250 gift card to El Plantio Nursery & Landscapin­g in Escondido, she basically came out even.

“It’s because I have been creative and have done most of the work myself,” Reutlinger explained. “It is easy to start plants from cuttings and saves money if one is patient and nurtures the little cuttings. I have planted California poppies, giant Gazania daisies (which reseed themselves constantly), and marigolds every year from seeds I have collected and dried from the previous year’s flowers.”

WATER SAVED

She had minimal savings, because the landscape before her project was mostly weeds, and there’s no irrigation installed. Any watering is done lightly with a garden hose — or rain.

 ?? EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T PHOTOS ?? Jeanne Reutlinger’s Escondido garden is the winner of the 2022 WaterSmart Landscape Contest for the city’s water district. She created it over a three-year period.
EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T PHOTOS Jeanne Reutlinger’s Escondido garden is the winner of the 2022 WaterSmart Landscape Contest for the city’s water district. She created it over a three-year period.
 ?? ?? Reutlinger’s daughter and grandson helped in building her garden; she also gathered clippings from neighbors on her walks.
Reutlinger’s daughter and grandson helped in building her garden; she also gathered clippings from neighbors on her walks.
 ?? EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T ?? Jeanne Reutlinger wanted a colorful garden that attracted pollinator­s.
EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T Jeanne Reutlinger wanted a colorful garden that attracted pollinator­s.
 ?? EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T ?? Reutlinger got contributi­ons from friends, including giant yellow gazania daisies.
EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T Reutlinger got contributi­ons from friends, including giant yellow gazania daisies.
 ?? ??
 ?? EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T ?? Reutlinger’s grandson provided a wooden stump to rest a birdbath on and another striking branch that extends over it to serve as a perch for visiting birds.
EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T Reutlinger’s grandson provided a wooden stump to rest a birdbath on and another striking branch that extends over it to serve as a perch for visiting birds.
 ?? EMILY J. MIXER ?? The yard started as dirt and weeds (top); Reutlinger started filling it in with low-water groundcove­r, succulents, shrubs and flowers.
EMILY J. MIXER The yard started as dirt and weeds (top); Reutlinger started filling it in with low-water groundcove­r, succulents, shrubs and flowers.

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