Poetry professor turned prairie advocate and author Benjamin Vogt pinpoints a moment in his Minnesota childhood that influenced his current passions. As a boy, exploring a wood near his home in the yet-to-be-developed western suburbs, he was reveling in the quiet when a flock of geese flew overhead.
"The sound of the wingbeats, the calls, woke something primal in me," he said.
Vogt gained a reputation — and following — for his philosophy on ethical gardening and innovative ways to approach home landscaping.
Now he's getting ready to release a book, "Prairie Up! An Introduction to Natural Garden Design," on Jan. 24, outlining practical steps and detailed plans for creating gardens that nurture various species — not just the humans who tend them.
We spoke with Vogt, who now runs Monarch Gardens design firm in Nebraska, about why he's an advocate of prairie-style landscaping, sought tips on how to get started — while co-existing with neighbors and homeowners — and why a technique called "matrix planting" is effective.
Q: You want people to "rethink pretty." Where do they begin and how do they benefit?
A: We were all raised to think lawns are pretty, but they're only pretty for one species. In a time of climate change and mass extinction, we have to think about the diversity of plant species. If we're not doing that, if we're not doing something that resembles nature, that helps foster wildlife, we're not really gardening.
If you're ready to convert your lawn to a prairie garden, your lawn is already a kind of prairie space. Remove the lawn and you're ready to go.