Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (2024)

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  • Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11)

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (6)

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (7)

Attracting bees, birds, butterflies and other wildlife to your garden is one of the best ideas. It helps to have a healthy, vibrant, sustainable landscape. The key is to plant a plot that provides and supports wildlife habitat year round, especially for birds.

Let’s start with the plants. To make this super-simple, we've graphed out three plants for each of the four seasons. These are ideal for supporting wildlife.Mix and match them for the look you want in your garden. As always, when it comes to perennials and shrubs, remember to plant in groups of three or more. (These are only a few of the many plants that are ideal for a wildlife habitat garden.Forage for more!)

(Be sure to check out the recommended plants forzones 3 – 5andzones 6 – 8. Some plants can thrive in a wide range of zones.)

Spring

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (8)

Little John Dwarf Bottlebrush
Zone: 8 – 11

Blood red blooms from spring through summer are beloved by butterflies and bees. Water-wise. Full sun.

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (9)

Victoria California Lilac
Zone: 8 – 10

Butterflies alight on cobalt-blue buds in late spring. Dense foliage provides cover for birds. Water-wise. Full sun.

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (10)

Fire Spinner® Ice Plant
Zone: 5 – 10

Butterflies and hummingbirds drink deeply from tri-colored flowers on a fast spreading mat. Water-wise. Full sun.

Summer

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (11)

Lavender Swirl® Trailing Lantana
Zone: 9 – 11

Irresistible to nectar lovers including bees, moths, hummingbirds and butterflies! Water-wise. Full sun.

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (12)

PowWow® White Coneflower
Zone: 3 – 10

Constantly surrounded by pollinators including bees, hover flies and butterflies. Water-wise. Full sun.

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (13)

With Love™ Lavender
Zone: 6 – 10

Butterflies, bees, hummingbirds–everyone loves the scented blooms. Heat-tolerant variety. Water-wise. Full sun.

Fall

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (14)

Santa Barbara Mexican Bush Sage
Zone: 9 – 11

Compact versionwith the same rich purple flowers that attract flocks of hummingbirds. Water-wise. Full sun.

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (15)

Echibeckia™ Summerina™ Brown
Zone: 6 – 10

Huge, long-lasting blooms means lots of nectar and pollen for hummingbirds, butterflies, and bees. Water-wise. Full sun.

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (16)

Plumetastic® Pink Muhly Grass
Zone: 7 – 10

Song birds and beneficial insects love the glittering purple clouds from late summer to fall. Water-wise. Full sun.

Winter

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (17)

Blue Elf Aloe
Zone: 9 – 11

Bright orange, wintertime flowers are afavorite of hummingbirds. Water-wise. Partial to full sun.

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (18)

Variegated New Zealand Christmas Tree
Zone: 9 – 11

Small, tidy tree with rich crimson flowers whose nectar attracts hummingbirds and beneficial insects. Water-wise. Full sun.

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 9 - 11) (19)

Golf Ball Kohuhu
Zone: 8 – 11

Inconspicuous flowers, but wow do they attract bees and butterflies! Great where boxwood fails. Water-wise. Full sun.

Tips for Attracting (and keeping) Wildlife to Your Garden

Here are five key elements you’ll need to provide (none of this is complicated, we promise!):

  • Evergreens and conifers that will feed and shelter wildlife, especially birds, year round.
  • Something blooming for as many months as you can manage. Many pollinators, especially bees, forage during the entire growing season.
  • Shelter for nesting or from bad weather. (Leave a hedge untrimmed and a section of lawn unmowed. Pile grass cuttings in a sunny spot; provide some bare soil for ground nesting bees.)
  • Limit your use of chemicals (both synthetic and organic) and use plenty of compost and mulch to build healthy soil. Healthy soils create healthy plants.
  • Consistent source of clean, fresh water for drinking, bathing and breeding. And, speaking of water, butterflies love wet soil for sipping water and for the salts and mineral nutrients. A little dirty puddle is appreciated.

Here’s more information onattracting pollinatorsand a few more plants that arelate summer bloomers.

Bring It Home

  1. Little John Dwarf Bottlebrush

    Add to Wish List Add to Compare

  1. Victoria California Lilac

    Add to Wish List Add to Compare

  1. Fire Spinner® Ice Plant

    Add to Wish List Add to Compare

  1. Lavender Swirl® Trailing Lantana

    Add to Wish List Add to Compare

  1. PowWow® White Coneflower

    Add to Wish List Add to Compare

  1. With Love™ Lavender

    Add to Wish List Add to Compare

  1. Summerina® Brown Echibeckia™

    Add to Wish List Add to Compare

  1. Santa Barbara Mexican Bush Sage

    Add to Wish List Add to Compare

  1. Plumetastic® Pink Muhly Grass

    Add to Wish List Add to Compare

  1. Blue Elf Aloe

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Previous Post Next Post

2017-02-28 02:10:00

SHOW COMMENTS HIDE COMMENTS

Grow a Year-Round Wildlife Habitat Garden (Zone 6 – 8) | Grow Beautifully

2017-03-02 10:11:06

[…] sure to check out the recommended plants for zones 3 – 5 and zones 9 – 11as some plants can thrive in a wide range of […]

Reply

Ring the Dinner Bell: Grow a Pollinator Border | Grow Beautifully

2017-03-22 16:54:43

[…] These plants will grow in a wide range of zones. If you would like specific recommendations for your own climate, here are some links for plants that are pollinator magnets:Zone 3 – 5, Zone 6 – 8, Zone 9 – 11 […]

Reply

Jean Goodrich

2017-03-30 15:47:32

I'm in Zone 9a (Tucson, lower foothills) and have a very active community of ground squirrels (antelope squirrel). I want to put in a small bee/butterfly garden, but the squirrels eat just about anything. Full sun midday, early morning and afternoon shade, hot and dry. I've started with your Red Butterfly Milkweed and Vibe Ignition Purple Salvia (which have lasted 4 days so far...). I could use a low foreground/border plant. Given the challenging conditions, what would you suggest? Thanks!

Reply

Yoka Snytsheuvel

2018-03-20 21:18:12

Love that you show what flowers and more you should think of when your zone is 9-11. Its Henderson, Nevada, therefore we appreciate the information you give and your nice photographs. Thanks!

Reply

Katherine Alger

2018-08-16 10:31:10

how can i get more information on year round wildlife habitat for butterflies, bees, hummers...

Reply

Leann Henshaw

2019-02-04 12:20:01

Some garden ideas I wouldn't have thought of as having appeal to various bugs and birds! I'll consider evergreens for the value that I was unaware of.

Reply

Leann Henshaw

2019-07-05 12:12:41

I have deep row of Pink Mulhy across the front of my home, and it has gotten a lot of attention! At the base of these plants I have a gold groudcover (creeping jenny), As long as I can keep up with the occasional week that pops up, it is looking good!

Reply

Tanya DeLuca

2020-04-07 08:06:31

Great information, Thank u

Reply

Donald Cox

2020-06-01 07:58:39

Im looking for a year-round plan including perennial plants.

Reply

Randy

2020-08-14 14:13:15

This is great information. The easiest and best information I have found. Thank you.

Reply

Joy Kennedy

2020-09-29 14:31:36

Excellent info for seasonal pollinator plants. Do you have plants for sale in any Bakersfield, CA stores?

Reply

Deanna lindemann

2021-04-02 12:11:51

No identification for winter group?

Reply

Megan McConnell

2021-04-02 20:27:14

Whoops! Looks like there was an issue when we changed our web service. We'll get this updated. Thank you for pointing this out!

Reply

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