Here are 10 reasons to be thankful you garden in Western Washington and not some other place

The last week of November is when gardeners give thanks.

Living in Western Washington means we can grow a wider variety of plants than just about any place in the world. From cacti and succulents to mosses and ferns, our mild winter and summer climate gives us plenty of plant choices.

10 REASONS TO BE THANKFUL YOU GARDEN IN WESTERN WASHINGTON

  • Our native plants are beautiful and plentiful. You can drive through any neighborhood and see sword ferns below and cedar and fir trees above, giving our area that evergreen beauty all year long.
  • Our lawns turn green even if we don’t water in the summer. The return of the fall rains will green up even the driest patch of grass, and that’s a beautiful thing to see on a gray winter day.
Maaike Starkey Courtesy of Save the Snakes
  • We don’t have to worry about rattle snakes hiding under house foundations or sunning themselves on boulders like our Eastern Washington neighbors.
  • Be thankful that moose don’t trample newly planted gardens. We may have deer issues, but gardeners in Alaska deal with moose — and often bear as well.
National Park Service
  • The invasive vine called Kudzu has not been spotted here. This is the tropical vine that has smothered the Southern states. We might be hacking back English Ivy but Kudzu makes ivy look timid.
  • Ants on plants? That’s nothing compared to the biting, stinging and persistent ant colonies in the desert states. Our ants are tame and well behaved in comparison.
The Olympian
  • Our native soil is slightly acid. This means plants such as camellias, rhododendrons and azaleas thrive in Western Washington gardens. These are the plants that often astound visitors from out of the area.
  • Western Washington is home to wholesale plant growers and lots of independent nurseries. This means plants available to local gardeners come in a vast variety of new forms, colors and fresh introductions. We also pay a lot less than if the same plant was offered for sale in the Midwest or East Coast.
  • Western Washington is home to the Northwest Flower and Garden Show, celebrated this year Feb. 19-23. This indoor show held in Seattle at the Washington State Convention Center has been ranked one of the top garden shows in the country.
Craig Sailor The News Tribune
  • Washington state is the original home and founding site of the Master Gardener. This program has now spread not only to all 50 states but around the world as well. Just one more way we all keep growing.

Marianne Binetti has a degree in horticulture from Washington State University and is the author of several books. Reach her at binettigarden.com

By Marianne Binetti – theolympian

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