SOURCES OF INFORMATION AND ASSISTANCE
American Society of Landscape Architects
Illinois Chapter
1N141 County Farm Road
Winfield, IL 60190
(630) 752-0197
To request an Illinois Landscape
Architecture Firms directory
Audubon Society of New York State, Inc.
46 Rarick Road
Selkirk, NY 12158
(518) 767-9051
(Cooperative Sanctuary Programs for Golf Courses and Schools)
Chicago Botanic Garden
1000 Lake Cook Road
P.O. Box 400
Glencoe, IL 60022-0400
(847) 835-5440
City of Chicago Department of Environment
North Park Village Nature Center
5801 North Pulaski Road
Chicago, Illinois 60646
(312) 744-5472
Chicagoland Environmental Network
Brookfield Zoo,
North Park Village Nature Center
5801 North Pulaski Road
Chicago, IL 60646
(312) 744-5472
Cooperative Extension Service of the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign:
Master Gardeners
Chicago North Unit: (773) 292-4444
Cook County-North Suburban: (847) 298-3502
Cook County-South Suburban: (708) 532-3337
DuPage Unit: (630) 653-4114
Kane County: (630) 584-6166
Lake County: ( 847) 223-8627
McHenry County: ( 815) 338-4747
Will County: ( 815) 727-9296
Illinois Department of Natural Resources
Division of Natural Heritage
524 South 2nd Street
Springfield, IL 62701-1787
(217) 785-8774
Illinois Department of Natural Resources
Division of Natural Heritage
110 James Road
Spring Grove, IL 60081
(815) 675-2385
Illinois Native Plant Society
Forest Glen Preserve
20301 East 900 North Road
Westville, IL 61883
(217) 662-2142
Madison Arboretum
University of Wisconsin
1207 Seminole Highway
Madison, WI 53711
(608) 262-5209
The Morton Arboretum Library
Route 53
Lisle, IL 60532
(630) 719-2427
National Wildflower Research Center
2600 FM 973 North
Austin, TX 78725
(512) 292 4200
The Nature Conservancy
IL Field Office
8 South Michigan Avenue, Suite 900
Chicago, IL 60603
(312) 346-8166
Northeastern Illinois Planning
Commission (NIPC)
222 South Riverside Plaza, Suite 1800
Chicago, IL 60606
(312 )454-0400
Natural Resources Department
US Army Corps of Engineers
Permit Evaluation Section Chief
US Army Corps of Engineers
Regulatory Branch
111 N. Canal St.
Chicago, IL 60606
(312) 353-6400, x 4028
(for information about wetlands
regulations)
USDA: Natural Resources
Conservation Service
(formerly the Soil Conservation Service):
Chicago:
NRCS
Chicago Metro Urban & Community Assistance Office
603 E. Diehl Road, Suite 131
Naperville IL 60563-1476
(630) 505-7808
DuPage and Kane Counties:
NRCS and Kane-DuPage Soil & Water Conservation District
St. Charles Field Office
545 Randall Rd.
St. Charles, IL 60174
(630) 584-9534 (NRCS)
(630) 584-7961 (SWCD)
Lake County:
NRCS and Lake County Soil & Water Conservation District
100 N. Atkinson Rd, Suite 102-A
Grayslake, IL 60030-7805
(847) 223-1056
McHenry County:
NRCS and McHenry County Soil & Water Conservation District
Woodstock Field Office
1143 N. Seminary, P.O. Box 168
Woodstock, IL 60098
(815) 338-0049 (NRCS)
(815) 338-0099 (SWCD)
North Cook County:
NRCS and North Cook Soil & Water Conservation District
Address: P.O. Box 407, Streamwood, IL 60107
Location: 899 Jay Street, Elgin, IL
(847) 468-0071 (NRCS)
(847) 991-4330 (SWCD)
South Cook and Will Counties:
NRCS and Will-S.Cook Soil & Water Conservation District
Joliet Field Office
1201 Gouger Rd.
New Lenox, IL 60451
(815) 462-3106 (NRCS)
(815) 462-3151 (SWCD)
Wild Ones - Natural Landscapers, Ltd.
PO Box 23576
Milwaukee, WI 53223-0576
(414) 251-2185
SOURCES OF NATIVE SEEDS, PLANTS, AND GARDEN CATALOGS
Company names mentioned on the following pages are presented strictly for informational
purposes; there is no implied endorsement or recommendation. Other companies provide
materials for natural landscaping. An exhaustive listing is not possible for this type of
publication.
Illinois
Berthold Nursery
434 E. Devon
Elk Grove Village, IL 60007
(847) 439-2600
Blazing Star
2107 Edgewood Dr.
Woodstock, IL 60098
(815) 338-4716
Bluestem Prairie Nursery
Route 2, Box 92
Hillsboro, IL 62049
(217) 532-6344 (retail only)
Enders Greenhouse
104 Enders Drive
Cherry Valley, IL 61016
(815) 332-5255
Genesis Nursery
Rural Route 1, Box 32
Walnut, IL 61376
(815) 438-2220
(plants for a variety of
restoration activities,
including wetlands)
LaFayette Home Nursery, Inc.
Rt. 1, Box 1A
LaFayette, IL 61449
(309) 995-3311
Lee's Gardens
PO Box 5
25986 Sauder RoadTremont, IL 61568
(309) 925-5262
(Woodland native plants, retail only)
Possibility Place Nursery
7548 W. Monee Road
Monee, IL 60449
(708) 534-3988
Spring Bluff Nursery
41 W. 130 Norris Road
Sugar Grove, IL 60554
(708) 466-4278
(retail only)
The Natural Garden
38 W. 443 Hwy 64
St. Charles, IL 60174
(708) 584-0150
The Prairie Garden
705 So. Kenilworth
Oak Park, IL 60304
(708) 386-7495
Windsong Prairie Nursery
5412 N Ridgeway Road
Ringwood, IL 60072
(815) 653-6936
(seeds only)
Plant Sales held by Not-for-Profit Organizations:
Wildflower Preservation and Propagation Committee (McHenry County Defenders)
Held annually the first Sunday of May
(815) 338-0393
Chicago Botanic Garden
A Bloomin Sale
1000 Lake cook Road
Glencoe, IL 60022-0440
(847) 835-5440
Held annually in May; call for dates
Wisconsin
Applied Ecological and Taylor Creek Restoration Nurseries
P.O. Box 256
17921 Smith Road
Brodhead, WI 53520
(608) 897-8641
Johnson's Nursery
W 180 N 6275 Marcy Road
Menomonee Falls, WI 53051
(414) 252-4988
Milaeger's Gardens
4838 Douglass Ave.
Racine, WI 53402-2498
(414) 639-2371
Prairie Future Seed Company
PO Box 644
Menomonee Falls, WI 53052-0644
(414) 491-0685
Prairie Nursery
PO Box 306
Westfield, WI 53964
(608) 296-3679
Prairie Ridge Nursery
9738 Overland Road
Mt. Horeb, WI 53572
(608) 437-5245
Reeseville Ridge Nursery
PO Box 171
309 S. Main Street
Reeseville, WI 53579
(414) 927-3291
FACT SHEET: WHAT IS NATURAL LANDSCAPING AND WHY IS IT BENEFICIAL?
WHAT IS NATURAL LANDSCAPING?
Natural landscaping is the design, construction, and maintenance of landscapes which
provide the beneficial natural functions that are lost through cultivation of conventional
lawns. Natural landscaping stresses the preservation and reintroduction of plants native
to our area. The native plants used in natural landscaping are hardy and attractive. They
can be used to stabilize soil, reduce flooding, absorb pollutants, and sustain
wildlife. Conventional turf, composed of cool season grasses (e.g. Kentucky blue
grass), is costly to maintain; dependent upon environmentally damaging chemicals;
non-supportive of the diversity of organisms that are characteristic of a healthy
environment; and lacking in visual interest.
WHY IS NATURAL LANDSCAPING BENEFICIAL?
Economic Benefits
Reduced Costs of Landscape Installation and Maintenance
Natural landscapes do not require irrigation; they need no or infrequent mowing; lawn
maintenance services are not needed.
Reduced Costs of Stormwater Management
Natural landscaping reduces the amount of stormwater runoff, thereby reducing
infrastructure costs. Stormwater conveyance and detention facilities that replicate
natural systems are less expensive to build and maintain.
Creation of Distinctive and Attractive Properties
The visual interest and diversity of natural landscapes are assets to property owners and
communities. Natural landscapes are a part of high quality design and environmental
stewardship.
Support of the "Green Industry"
Natural landscaping is an increasingly important segment of the green industry. There are
opportunities for business development, especially in relation to landscape design and the
propagation and installation of plant materials.
Environmental Benefits
Reduced Soil Erosion
Native plants appropriately used on sloped sites, stream banks, drainage ways, and
shorelines can effectively hold the soil and reduce erosion.
Improved Water Quality
Native vegetation in naturalized drainage ways enhances the infiltration of contaminated
stormwater. The root systems improve soil permeability and help the uptake of pollutants.
Vegetated buffers along streambanks and shorelines intercept surface runoff and subsurface
water pollutants. The avoidance of fertilizers and other chemicals is also a big factor in
protecting water quality.
Reduced Air and Noise Pollution
Lawn mowing equipment is a heavy air polluter and is noisy. Natural landscaping requires
little or no mowing.
Climatological Benefits
Native plants store large amounts of carbon which would otherwise exist in the atmosphere
as carbon dioxide and contribute to global warming. Natural landscaping can provide shade
and windbreaks to reduce costs of air conditioning and heating.
Habitat Restoration and Protection
Natural landscaping protects and restores habitats for wildlife. The introduction of
native plants can enhance the populations of birds, insects, and animals which are
essential components of healthy ecosystems.
Beautification
Natural landscaping can provide a diversity of color and texture throughout the year which
significantly contributes to the beauty of sites and communities.
Educational and Recreational Benefits
Conservation Education
Natural landscaping puts people in touch with nature. Municipalities, school districts,
park districts, forest preserve and conservation districts, as well as private educational
organizations, can use natural landscaping as an educational tool.
Recreation
Natural landscapes are ideal locations for bird watching, photography, walking and hiking,
and simply enjoying the quiet and beauty of nature.
Scientific Study
Natural landscapes provide professional scientists and science students with outdoor
laboratories for studying nature.
WHO SHOULD USE NATURAL LANDSCAPING?
Natural landscaping should be considered where the ground surface is not required to
bear intense usage. Wherever there is conventional lawn there is potential for small or
large scale conversion to natural landscaping. New development projects should consider
natural landscaping at the site design stage. Natural landscaping is especially
appropriate for:
- home sites and planned developments
- governmental properties: civic building sites, schools, and libraries
- corporate and office campuses
- institutional sites
- golf courses
- parks
- roadway right of way and utility corridors
- stormwater conveyance and detention areas
WHAT CAN I DO IN MY COMMUNITY TO PROMOTE THE USE OF NATURAL LANDSCAPING?
As a property owner you can install natural landscaping on your own land and encourage
other property owners to do likewise.
As a public official you can install natural landscaping on new and existing public
sites. You can adopt or amend the local weed ordinances and development regulations so as
to encourage natural landscaping. You can provide information about natural landscaping to
residents, developers, and civic organizations. You can identify natural areas within the
community that need to be preserved or restored. You can sponsor demonstration projects
and award creative efforts.
As a volunteer you can assist in the installation and monitoring of natural landscaping
projects. You can work with local officials and conservation organizations to promote
natural landscaping.
As a developer you can include natural landscaping as a component of new development
projects.
WHERE CAN I GO FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION?
United States Environmental Protection Agency
77 West Jackson Boulevard
Chicago, Illinois 60604
(800) 621-8431
Internet Home Page: http://www.epa.gov/greenacres/
Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission
222 South Riverside Plaza, Suite 1800
Chicago, Illinois 60606
(312) 454-0400
Internet Website: http://www.nipc.cog.il.us
SAMPLE LOCAL ORDINANCES
Chapter 4 discusses the role of local government in encouraging the use of natural
landscaping and describes a range of regulatory approaches that help eliminate local weed
ordinances as a deterrent to natural landscaping. The text of natural landscaping
ordinances is too voluminous to include in this document. Instead, several municipal
ordinance sources are identified here and full text can be found on the USEPA web page:
http://www.epa.gov/greenacres/
The Madison, Wisconsin natural lawn ordinance exemplifies the permit approach.
"Any owner or operator of land in the City of Madison may apply for approval of a
land management plan for a natural lawn, one where the grasses exceed eight (8) inches in
height, with the inspection unit of the department of planning and development."
The City of Madison has published "An Introduction to Naturalized Landscapes: A
Guide to Madison Natural Lawn Ordinance" which provides excellent supportive
information, including sketches illustrating various approaches to using natural
landscaping in residential lots. There are tips on how to sustain compatibility with
neighbors who do not use natural landscaping.
Harvard, Illinois takes a similar approach within its weed ordinance by providing for
exceptions and a permit process for natural landscaping. Exceptions are for native
planting, wildlife plantings, erosion control, soil fertility building, government
programs, educational programs, cultivation, biological control, parks and open space, and
wooded areas.
A model ordinance included in Bret Rappaport's John Marshall Law Review article (Volume
26, Summer 1993, Number 4) takes the approach of providing for a setback:
1. Prohibition: untended, rank and unmanaged growth of vegetation on any property
within the city which is visible from any public way, street, sidewalk or alley is
declared to be a public nuisance and may be abated in accordance with the procedures set
forth in articles 2-3 of the ordinance. This prohibition shall not apply to vegetation
native to [state or region], provided there is a setback of not less than four (4) feet
from the front line of vegetation not in excess of eighteen (18) inches exclusive of trees
and shrubs.
2. Procedure: the city shall issue a written citation to a landowner whose property is
in violation of article 1 of this ordinance. This citation shall inform said landowner of
the basis of the citation and shall include the following information: 1)the date of any
inspection and the name of the inspector; and 2) the names and addresses of any
neighbor(s) of the landowner or other person(s) who contacted the city or was contacted by
the city regarding the alleged violation of article 1 of this ordinance. The citation
shall be adjudicated in accordance with art. ___, of the municipal code relating to
adjudication of [traffic offenses].
3. Abatement and penalty: upon a finding of guilty in accordance with article 2 of this
ordinance, the landowner shall have twenty-eight (28) calendar days in which to abate the
nuisance. If he/she does not so act, the city may take whatever reasonable action is
necessary to abate the nuisance. The costs of such abatement shall be assessed against the
landowner and shall constitute a fine, the collection of which may be made pursuant to the
provisions of art. ___[relating to imposing a lien on the property].
Long Grove, Illinois, a low-density conservation conscious community takes a
comprehensive approach involving the creation of upland and lowland conservancy districts,
as well as scenic corridor districts. The municipality works directly with the Illinois
EPA to regulate burning. The village has a conservancy/scenic corridor committee and an
application and review process for residents wanting to make landscaping improvements
within the conservancy districts. Residents are also provided with plant lists and lists
of seed and plant sources.
The Milwaukee Audubon Society has promulgated a model natural landscaping ordinance
which establishes the right to landscape naturally provided the natural heritage or
ornamental garden does not encroach upon property ownership lines or right-of-way, and the
owner/occupier complies with notice provisions:
"Section 1. Natural heritage and ornamental gardens. Not withstanding any
provision of any other ordinance, an owner or occupier, who has written authorization of
the owner, of residential property may establish and maintain a natural heritage or
ornamental garden, provided that:
a). Such a garden, or any portion thereof, does not encroach any property ownership
line or public right-of-way: and, b). the owner or occupier complies with the notice
provision of Section 2.
Section 2. Notice if any natural heritage or ornamental garden, or the combination
thereof, occupies an area in excess of fifty percent of the surface area of the property,
not otherwise occupied by buildings, structures, or improvements, the owner or occupier
shall file a notice with ________. Such notice shall contain: a). The name and address of
the owner or occupier filing the notice; b). A drawing or sketch that depicts the area of
the garden ... c). In the case of a natural heritage garden, the drawing shall identify
the type of natural community which is intended to be simulated."
An ordinance proposed for Appleton, Wisconsin reads, in part, as follows:
"The ordinance recognizes the fundamental right of every landowner to develop and
maintain his landscape in the manner of his choosing, insofar as it is not in a state of
neglect, nor presents a hazard to the public health or safety, or to the agricultural
environment.
(a) every landowner possessing lawns of the conventional bluegrass type shall be
responsible for maintaining them at a height not to exceed eight inches.
(b) every landowner shall be responsible for the destruction of all weeds on every
parcel of land which he shall own or control.
The city acknowledges the desirability of permitting and encouraging the preservation
and restoration of natural plant communities within its boundaries. It acknowledges its
citizens' rights to enjoy and benefit from the variety, beauty, and other values of
natural landscaping, including freedom from toxic chemicals, and it seeks to guarantee
citizens the freedom to pursue restoration projects as viable and desirable alternatives
to other conventional modes of landscaping. In such cases, the city encourages, but does
not require, landowners to discuss their intentions with the weed commissioner before
undertaking such endeavors."
A proposed natural landscape ordinance from the national wildflower research center in
Austin, Texas provides a broad legislative purpose to support natural landscaping and then
establishes the right to landscape naturally:
"It shall be lawful to grow native plants, including ferns, grasses, forbs,
shrubs, and trees, in a managed landscape design when said plants were obtained not in
violation of local, state or federal laws. No commissioner or other agent of the [town,
city, village, county, etc.] may undertake to damage, remove, burn, or cut vegetation on a
preservation or restoration project or in any other landscape incorporating native plants,
except those specifically prohibited herein, and except on order of a court of record
following a hearing at which it is established (1) that noxious weeds specifically named
in the weed ordinance exist in such preservation or restoration projects and that a
condition creating a clear and present hazard to public health or safety has arisen or (2)
that the project is a threat to the agricultural economy. An action for a court order
under this subsection shall be maintained as an action to enjoin a public nuisance. A
court order under this subsection shall provide that the destruction, cutting or removal
of vegetation shall be selective unless general cutting, destruction, or removal is
necessary to eliminate the offending condition."
A 1996 proposal to amend the city and village powers in the state of Nebraska contained
language pertaining to the weed control powers of local government, with the specific
provision that:
"For purposes of this section, herbaceous vegetation that endangers the public
health, safety, and welfare does not include native grasses and plants indigenous to
Nebraska that are (a) planted and maintained as part of a garden or for landscaping
purposes or (b) planted and maintained for erosion control, weed control, or designated
wildlife areas."
Similarly, proposed amendments to the weed ordinance of Lawrence, Kansas contained such
language as:
"The purpose of this article is to recognize a person's fundamental right to
choose their own landscaping whether it be the conventional mowed turf grass lawn or the
less common natural landscaping; to differentiate between permitted natural landscaping
and unpermitted growth or neglect...
Provided that nothing in this article shall be construed to subject trees, shrubbery,
varietal flowers or native plant flowers, decorative grasses or native prairie grasses,
ornamental plants and formal or informal flower or vegetable gardens to the provisions
regarding excessive growth contained herein."
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SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
A. NATURAL LANDSCAPING
Diekelmann, John; Schuster, Robert, 1982: Natural Landscaping - Designing with Native
Plant Communities. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company.
Harker, Donald; Evans, Sherri; Evans, Mark; Harker, Kay; 1993: Landscape Restoration
Handbook. Boca Raton: Lewis Publishers.
Henderson, Carrol L., 1987: Landscaping for Wildlife. St. Paul: Minnesota Department of
Natural Resources.
B. BIOENGINEERING
Apfelbaum, S. I., J.D. Eppich, T.H. Price, and M. Sands, 1995: "The Prairie
Crossing Project: Attaining Water Quality and Stormwater Management Goals in a
Conservation Development" in Proceeding from A National Symposium: Using Ecological
Restoration to Meet Clean Water Act Goals, Chicago, IL. Northeastern Illinois Planning
Commission,1995.
Austin, Richard L., 1984: Designing the Natural Landscape. New York: Van Nostrand
Reinhold Company.
Coppin, N. J., Richards, I.G., eds., 1990: Use of Vegetation in Civil Engineering.
Cambridge, Great Britain: University Press.
Dreher, D.W. and T. H. Price, 1992: Best Management Practice Guidebook for Urban
Development. Chicago, IL: Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission.
Gray, Donald H.; Leiser, Andrew T., 1989: Biotechnical Slope Protection and Erosion
Control. Malabar, Florida: Krieger Publishing Company.
Rust Environment and Intrastructure, "Streambank Stabilization Program,"
August, 1995, for the DuPage County Department of Environmental Concerns.
C. VEGETATION AND PLANTS
(IN GENERAL)
Booth, Courtenay and James H. Zimmerman, 1978: Wildflowers and Weeds. New York:
Prentice Hall.
Lunn, Elizabeth T., 1982: Plants of the Illinois Dunesland. Waukegan, IL: Illinois
Dunesland Preservation Society.
Mohlenbrock, Robert H., 1970: Flowering Plants - Lilies to Orchids. The Illustrated
Flora of Illinois. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.
Mohlenbrock, Robert H., 1982: Flowering Plants - Basswoods to Spurges. The Illustrated
Flora of Illinois. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.
Mohlenbrock, Robert, H., 1990: Flowering Plants - Nightshades to Mistletoe. The
Illustrated Flora of Illinois. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.
Newcomb, Lawrence., 1977: Newcomb's Wildflower Guide. Boston: Little Brown and Company.
Swink, Floyd; Wilhelm, Gerould, 1994: Plants of the Chicago Region. 4th ed.
Indianapolis: Indiana Academy of Science.
Werner, William E., Jr., 1988: Life and Lore of Illinois Wildflowers. Springfield, IL:
Illinois State Museum.
Young, Dick, 1994: Kane County Wild Plants and Natural Areas, Geneva, Illinois: Kane
County Forest Preserve District. 2nd ed.
D. HABITAT RESTORATION (IN GENERAL)
Anonymous, 1981: Illinois plants for habitat restoration. Springfield: Illinois
Department of Conservation.
E. PRAIRIE
Costello, David F., 1969: The Prairie World - Plants and animals of the grassland sea.
New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company.
Duncan Patricia D., 1978: Tallgrass Prairie: The Inland Sea. Kansas City: The Lowell
Press.
Kirt, Russel R., 1995: Prairie Plants of the Midwest: Identification and Ecology.
Champaign, IL: Sties Publishing L. L. C.
Nicols, Stan; Entine, Lynn, 1978: Prairie Primer. University of Wisconsin-Extension.
Rock, Harold W., 1977: Prairie Propagation Handbook. 5th Edition. Wehr Nature Center:
Whitnall Park.
Runkel, Sylvan T.; Roosa , Dean M., 1989: Wildflowers of the Tallgrass Prairie: The
Upper Midwest. Ames, Iowa: Iowa State University Press.
Smith, J. Robert; Smith, Beatrice S., 1980: The Prairie Garden - 70 Native Plants You
Can Grow in Town or Garden. Madison, WI: The University of Wisconsin Press.
Voigt, John, W.; Mohlenbrock, Robert H., ?: Prairie Plants of Illinois. Springfield,
IL: Illinois Department of Conservation, Division of Forestry.
F. WOODLANDS
Miller, Robert W., 1988: Urban Forestry - Planning and Managing Urban Greenspaces.
Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
Mohlenbrock, Richard H., ?: Spring Woodland Wildflowers of Illinois. Springfield, IL:
Illinois Department of Conservation.
G. WETLANDS
Caduto, Michael J., 1990: Pond and Brook - A Guide to Nature in Freshwater
Environments. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England.
Mohlenbrock, Robert, ed., 1988: A Field Guide to the Wetlands of Illinois. Springfield,
IL: Illinois Department of Conservation.
Salvesen, David, 1990: Wetlands: Mitigation and Regulating Development Impacts.
Washington, D.C.: ULI - the Urban Land Institute.
H. NATURAL GARDENING AND LAWN ALTERNATIVES FOR HOMEOWNERS
Note: An increasing selection of books on this subject is coming onto the market. The
gardening section of most larger bookstores and libraries will have many titles from which
to choose.
Austin, Richard L., 1986: Wild Gardening - Strategies and Procedures using Native
Plantings. New York: Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Bormann, F. Herbert; Balmori, Diana; Geballe, Gordon T., 1993: Redesigning the American
Lawn / A Search for Environmental Harmony. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Daniels, Stevie, 1995: The Wild Lawn Handbook: Alternatives to the Traditional Front
Lawn. Yew York: Macmillan.
Druse, Ken; Roach, Margaret, 1994: The Natural Habitat Garden. New York: Clarkson
Potter/ Publishers.
Smyser, Carol A., 1982: Nature's Design / A Practical Guide to Natural Landscaping.
Emmaus: Rodale Press.
Snyder, Leon C., 1991: Native Plants for Northern Gardens. Chanhassen, MN: Andersen
Horticultural Library.
Stein, Sarah, 1993: Noah's Garden / Restoring the ecology of your own back yards.
Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.
Wasowski, Sally; Wasowski, Andy, 1992: Requiem for a Lawnmower and other Essays on Easy
Gardening with Native Plants. Dallas: Taylor Publishing Company.
Wilson, Jim, 1992: Landscaping with Wildflowers / An Environmental Approach to
Gardening. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.
Wilson, William H. W., 1984: Landscaping with Wildflowers & Native Plants. San
Francisco: Chevron Chemical Company.
I. WEED ORDINANCES
Note: NIPC is collecting and keeping on file ordinances adopted by local communities.
Rappaport, Bret, 1993: The John Marshall Law
Review. Chicago: The John Marshall Law School. The John Marshall Law Review, Volume 26,
Number 4, Summer 1993. |