Your Colorado Native Garden starts here
Services we offer
100 native plants delivered to your home in Denver
Transform your landscape with a thoughtfully curated selection of native grasses and perennials designed to provide vibrant spring, summer, and fall color — while supporting local wildlife all year long.
This diverse collection offers nectar for pollinators, seeds for birds, and habitat for beneficial insects, helping you create a thriving, ecologically rich garden right at home.
Even better, many of these plants naturally produce seeds and divisions each year, allowing you to expand your garden over time — or share beautiful, homegrown gifts with friends and neighbors.
What’s Included:
100 carefully selected grasses and perennial plants
Season-long blooms and texture
Wildlife-friendly species suited for Denver
Delivered directly to your door
Create beauty. Support biodiversity. Grow a garden that gives back — year after year.
We will place the plants in your desired space using Piet Oudolf’s signature approach—a naturalistic, matrix-based arrangement of repeating drifts that creates rhythm, movement, and year-round structure.
We’ll also oversee the planting process in coordination with your landscaper to ensure the design is implemented exactly as intended.
Design Your Native Garden in Just One Hour
During your one-hour session, we’ll collaboratively design your native garden. This creative, guided conversation is designed to bring clarity, confidence, and direction to your outdoor space.
You’ll receive:
Detailed session notes
Tailored design recommendations
A customized native plant list
From there, you can confidently DIY or choose to book additional services with us for further support.
Let’s create a garden that feels natural, intentional, and uniquely yours.
Before, Design, After
Weekly Mowing, Irrigation 3 times a week, No Wildlife
Design sample with Colorado Native Plants
Plenty of Wildlife (see below)
No Mowing, No Blowing, No Irrigation (after install)
No Pesticides, No Herbicides, No Fertilizer
Annual cut back in March