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UC Master Gardeners of San Mateo & San Francisco Counties

San Carlos Native Plant Habitat Garden

Native Plant Garden-Swallowtail on Coyote Mint-closeup

Location: 610 Elm St, San Carlos, CA 94070 (Between the San Carlos Library and San Carlos City Hall)

Status: Open to the public

 

Featured this Month

The California lilac or blueblossom (Ceanothus species) are covered with dark blue, pale blue, purple or white flowers, depending on the variety. Bumblebees and honeybees are very busy on these flowers, an early bloomer in our area.

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Ceanothus 'Julia Phelps'
Ceanothus 'Julia Phelps' is a very popular variety

See highlights from the garden in our Flickr photo albums: Native Plant Garden - Month by Month

 

Overview

Master Gardeners have created a native habitat garden and ecosystem, designed to be low maintenance, educational, and teeming with life. Native California plants were chosen to create a diverse community that provides food for wildlife, attracting birds, butterflies, and other pollinators.

This 8,000 square foot demonstration garden was developed in partnership with the City of San Carlos.  Started in late 2019, the native habitat garden has many mature plants while it continues to evolve. Its location near the library, city hall, and dog park, provides free and easy access for the community.  

Master Gardener volunteers work at the garden each week and regularly interact with the public. Master Gardeners periodically host public tours, demonstrations, and talks at the garden.

Garden Tours

Garden with butterfly sign

The San Carlos Native Plant Habitat Garden is always open and the public is invited to drop by and enjoy it. The San Carlos Library Herb Garden is available during Library hours. In addition, guided tours and educational demonstrations are scheduled spring through fall.

Check this website for updates on planned events, or subscribe to our monthly newsletter to hear about these and other Master Gardener events.

 

You can grow natives, too!

Thinking about starting your own native garden, or enhancing your garden with natives? See our California Native Gardening page for inspiration and resources.

Bloom charts - Updated July, 2024

Are you planning a native garden and want to create a colorful display that supports wildlife throughout the year? Our bloom charts can help.

Data has been collected twice a month since 2021 to record which plants are blooming in the garden. Since September 2023 we refined the data collection by recording the quantity of bloom: Some, Half and Full bloom. The latest charts are color-coded with this additional information.

There are four pages with charts for these color groups: Red/Pink, Orange/Yellow, White/Cream, and Blue/Lavender/Purple. Please see: Bloom Times by Color Group (PDF)

Bloom chart

Plants and animals in the garden

Seasonal Garden Highlights

There's always something of interest in the garden. This schedule highlights when some of the plants start their show:

  • January: Early manzanitas, early currants.
  • February: Manzanitas, early ceanothus.
  • March: Redbud, cleveland sage, California poppy.
  • April: Ceanothus, irises, blue-eyed grass, coral bells, bulbs.
  • May: Yarrows, California fuchsias, matilija poppy, gum plant, toyon, lupines.
  • June: Coyote mint, buckwheats, bush mallows.
  • July-November: Many plants continue blooming through fall, including: Monkeyflower, California fuchsias, sages, yarrows, buckwheats, and coyote mint.
  • December: Toyon shows off its bright red berries, some fall bloomers continue.

 

Cleveland sage along Chestnut walk

 

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