One day this July, when the temperature in Raleigh, North Carolina, soared, the state鈥檚 First Lady, Kristin Cooper, and head gardener, Charles Dixon, strolled the grounds of the governor鈥檚 mansion. They were looking for a place for a new garden, specifically one that would use native plants to create a habitat beneficial to some of the state鈥檚 350 species of resident and migratory birds.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 very encouraging,鈥 Cooper recalls. 鈥淲e had a lot of dry shade, and we had this privet hedge. The hedge had totally choked out everything.鈥
The First Lady admits she is 鈥渘ot a fan鈥 of privet, a nonindigenous shrub also known by its Latin name, Ligustrum. 鈥淚 think the flowers are stinky,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey make me sneeze. But I thought I鈥檇 just have to suck it up, because I couldn鈥檛 wrap my head around taking out this giant 25-foot hedge.鈥
She said to Dixon, 鈥淥h, too bad, it鈥檚 such a big project.鈥
Dixon readily rose to the challenge. 鈥淥h, I can take it down,鈥 he replied.
With his crew, Dixon would ultimately remove about 50 privet bushes, making way for the garden that Cooper officially unveiled last Thursday in a ceremony attended by about 100 people鈥攎ost of them members of 爆料公社 chapters and plants societies from across the state. Cooper also read a proclamation by her husband, Gov. Roy Cooper, pronouncing October 22鈥28 Native Plants Week in North Carolina.
In the shade of a towering oak tree, the crowd mingled while sipping iced tea and lemonade and eating cookies. About 1,000 recently planted specimens dotted the earthen beds surrounding the yard where they stood鈥攁 plot 100 feet wide and 40 feet deep. Many of the plants, 25 species in all, were merely sprigs. But in just a few months鈥 time they will have grown, leafed-out, and bloomed, constituting the first such garden at a governor鈥檚 residence in the country.
鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping by spring that it鈥檚 going to be absolutely magnificent back here,鈥 Cooper, wearing dangling earrings decorated with tiny bluebirds, said in an interview after the ceremony. (The First Lady says she started birding in 1996, while snowed in by a blizzard in the North Carolina mountains. She bought an 爆料公社 field guide, positioned feeders outside a window of her home, and kept a journal of the birds she saw. She鈥檚 been hooked ever since.)
As Cooper explained, North Carolina鈥檚 diverse bird population survives, in part, on more than 3,980 native-plant species found across the state. Unfortunately, as she also said, some of the plants鈥26, to be precise鈥攁re rare and considered endangered, primarily due to climate change. Similarly, up to 314 North American bird species have been identified by 爆料公社 as , and native plants, which provide more food and the best shelter for birds and other wildlife, will help them survive the changes. The garden is intended to raise awareness of the importance of native habitat, and to serve as an inspiration and model for individual residents and schools.
According to Heather Hahn, executive director of , the seed of the idea for the garden was planted two years ago, when Cooper鈥檚 husband was the state鈥檚 attorney general and a candidate for the office he now holds. Standing at the dais on the steps of the ornate, Victorian brick building, Hahn recalled speaking with Mrs. Cooper at some point during the campaign.
鈥淲e got an inkling from the First Lady that she might like some birding with some of our staff,鈥 Hahn says wryly, suggesting that Cooper 鈥渕ight have been a little tired from the traveling and the campaigning.鈥
At the invitation of Hahn, Mrs. Cooper went birding with a group led by Curtis Smalling, 爆料公社 North Carolina鈥檚 director of conservation. 鈥淲hat we thought was going to happen was that Curtis was going to show her a bunch of birds that she didn鈥檛 know,鈥 Hahn says. 鈥淐urtis did have a few things to teach鈥攂ut she knew a lot of birds.鈥
After Roy Cooper won the election and he and Kristin moved into the governor鈥檚 mansion, the state 爆料公社 office contacted her. By that time, the national 爆料公社 Society had launched its Plants for Birds initiative, with the goal being to 鈥減ut a million native plants in the ground, all across the country, for birds,鈥 Hahn says.
鈥淲e called up [the First Lady] and said, 鈥楬ey, we鈥檝e got an idea we鈥檇 love to come and talk to you about. And it has to do with the executive mansion,鈥欌 she says. 鈥淪o we came here, and did a great walk around the gardens and the property, and we just talked about what might be possible.鈥
John Rowden, the 爆料公社 director of community conservation, calls the result a 鈥渉uge success.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 a nice marriage of her passion and our approach, and creates a great platform for sharing both鈥 Rowden says. 鈥淚鈥檇 like to see this replicated elsewhere.鈥
One place it will certainly be replicated is at the Governor and Mrs. Cooper鈥檚 other residence, in the mountains near Asheville, N.C. Plans are underway for native plantings there, led by the garden designer, Ben Skelton, who did the garden at the executive mansion. Working with 爆料公社 has been an eye-opener for the plantsman. The collaboration guided his selection of the plants he used, and he learned the purpose of each one鈥攑roviding food, shade, winter ground cover, and other benefits to birds and pollinating insects.
鈥淚鈥檓 starting to understand the ecology more,鈥 Skelton says, sitting on a bench beside Mrs. Cooper. 鈥淚t makes the planting aspect more fun. When you鈥檙e able to put some stuff in the ground, and think, That plant is important; it has a purpose beyond humans enjoying it as ornamentation. It feels good to help nature.鈥
鈥淎 lot of the native-plant movements now are about water conservation鈥攑lants that use less water and chemicals,鈥 the first lady chimes in.
鈥淏ut using native plants to help wildlife at the same time, that鈥檚 great,鈥 Skelton notes.
鈥淵eah,鈥 Mrs. Cooper says. 鈥淵ou can help a lot of birds with just one plant.鈥
***
You can help! Native plants provide the food and habitat birds need. Use our database to discover which plants are best for your birds.