Missouri Botanical Garden has the BEST plant finder website - [link]
Plan It Wild is a great resource for native plant gardening - [link]
I would recommend finding a local nursery rather than a big box store with a garden center - Home Depot in particular has a strong bias towards colorful annuals vs native pollinators.
For ornamental grasses, I like carex and bluestem. For shrubs, New Jersey Tea and Chokeberry require basically zero maintenance. Foamflower is nice, and moderately shade-tolerant.
If you're looking to replace your ENTIRE lawn, the easiest thing to do would be to cover it right now in black plastic, put stakes in so it won't blow away, and then wait until September to plant your new shrubs and grasses. The plastic will kill the grass that's there now so in the fall you'll have a blank canvass to start from.
If you don't want to do the entire lawn at once, Plan it Wild also sells these fantastic kits that will cover 9 square feet at a time: [link]
"urban feral meadow"
That would be my preferred style.
-t, that's also a great idea. University of Virginia is right here and probably has an Ag program.
Jessica, I'm not replacing the whole lawn at once, it's more than I can handle. These are great ideas, thank you! Plan It Wild is exactly what I was looking for.
The nice thing about planting natives is their drought resistance, at least here in California. The lady showing me her yard full of native landscaping was really happy about not having to water it.
We are actively encouraging white violets to take over as much of our lawn as possible. they are native to Minnesota and we spend less time mowing.
I've become a little obsessed with pollinator pathways lately, so I'm planting native pollinator "islands" in the back yard around the borders, and will tackle the front next year. In the short term I'm just letting the clover take over but my end goal is native part-shade meadow.
That's wonderful! My "lawn" is all just whatever - maybe a previous owner planted grass but it's just as likely it all invaded from the neighbors along with the salsify and other unidentified greenery. Unfortunately the natives are not winning, I'm gonna have to manage it more actively to get something reasonable out there. It's tricky, because xeriscaping and low-water requirements are so much the focus around here, but I live close to a marsh and have a high water table so those plants do not do well in my yard. I do have good insect and bird habitat, though.
SHOE POST!
It's been a long time, friends. I just bought two pair of shoes:
[link]
[link]
Yay for summer sandals!
Yay sandals! I also had to invest in a couple new cheapo pairs because I have been doing a lot of beaching. Peace signs [link] and notes [link]
Quite comfy!
Oooh, old-school Dr. Scholl's!