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Plants

Celebrate California native plants at Festival of Books with L.A. Times Plants

Various Los Angeles native plants bloom into a wild bouquet in an illustration.
(Patrick Hruby / Los Angeles Times)
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If the phrase “native plants” makes your head spin, join the club.

Plants we once dismissed as weeds are now serious contenders in Southern California’s push for drought-tolerant landscapes. And even the word “landscape” is evolving as more and more people talk about using their yards and patios to create “habitat” for threatened birds and pollinators.

So no wonder we have questions. That’s why L.A. Times Plants is teaming up with the Theodore Payne Foundation and the California Native Plant Society to provide as many answers as possible during the L.A. Times’ Festival of Books, which runs April 22-23 at USC.

Georg Kochi moved to his family home and tore out the lawn. As he learned about native plants, he fell in love with drought-tolerant landscaping.

Like all the outdoor exhibits at the festival, our booth is free to visitors (look for #404) and will be chock-full of displays and information, including:

  • A scent station, to sample the sometimes intense, sometimes subtle fragrances of California native plants.
  • An urban meadow, with grasses and other plants that can replace a thirsty lawn
  • Demonstrations by Theodore Payne Foundation experts about creating habitat, growing native plants in containers and collecting, saving and planting seeds.
  • A guide to the best plants for your situation, using the California Native Plant Society’s Bloom! California database.

And if you’d like to learn more about creating a habitat around your home, buy a ticket for our Ask a Reporter session with Features editor Brittany Levine Beckman and Plants reporter Jeanette Marantos at 3 p.m. in Mudd Hall 203.

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