How We Support Natural Systems

Habitat Gardens

We see each of our gardens as a link in a chain of microhabitats that support threatened birds, butterflies and pollinators. To develop these relationships, our gardens incorporate plant combinations that are both beautiful and function as a complex ecosystem. We expertly choose plants that provide seasonal interest and bloom year round. The ecological diversity of Mariposa gardens creates an environment where the range of insect and bird life in the garden becomes an effective natural pest control. Our clients continuously marvel at the number of butterflies they find in our gardens. Hummingbirds, chickadees, bushtits, cedar waxwings, thrushes, are some of the regular birds nesting and feeding in Mariposa gardens. Many years of research and experience inform the selection of grasses, perennials, shrubs, vines and trees that we use to provide food, water and shelter for our local wildlife. 

Seed Fountains

Mariposa’s Seed Fountains are dry stacked stone fountains that are regularly visited by birds, bees and butterflies. Seed Fountains are designed for water to gently flow over the stone surface, making water more accessible for local pollinators. Seeds often grow in proportion to the Golden Ratio, inspiring the shape of our Seed Fountains and giving them their name.

Stonework

Dry-stacked stone work has been used throughout the world for many centuries to build houses, walls, staircases and bridges. Many of them still stand, hundreds of years later. Dry stacked stonework is done without the use of mortar or glue to bind the rocks. Carefully selected stones are knitted together using a time-tested technique that forms an interlocking, load bearing structure that lasts for hundreds of years. In the event of an earthquake, properly built dry stacked stone becomes tighter and stronger than stone bound with mortar. Dry stacked stone allows for proper soil drainage, where as concrete structures do not. In addition, dry stacked stone structures house many types of living creatures from reptiles to butterflies, who like to find shelter at night in the cracks of the warmed stones. Unique and well-crafted stone structures bring combined beauty and durability to an ecologically designed garden.

Greywater

Living Fountains capture the greywater from your washing machine or bathroom sink and clean it through plant roots and soil. This process filters the impurities from the water, and bioinvigorates it from the naturally occurring bacteria in the plants specially chosen to effectively clean the water. This water, when used in the garden, is teeming with life, and has the ability to make your plants healthier. We believe that this is an important solution to the drought conditions that we are currently facing. 


Water Harvesting

We practice the methods of slowing it, stopping it and sinking it by grading your garden so the water that falls onto your property is utilized efficiently. 


Dragonfly Ponds utilize the rainwater that falls on your roof and runs down your downspouts. Water is directed through trenches lined with drain rock into a dry well. When the dry well seasonally fills, water is collected and held which provides good growing conditions for wetland plants that dragonflies and other wetland pollinators are attracted to. Along with this ecologically friendly design, they add an artistic, unique approach to your garden!

Newsletter

By Andrea Hurd November 22, 2025
This past October, I was fortunate enough to go to the village of Deia in Mallorca to study the ancient local traditional dry stone building. I first came to Deia to study stone working in 2007, with The Stone Foundation for their annual Dry Stone Symposium . This was the first of several Symposiums and International training opportunities in the craft of dry stone work that I would have the privilege of attending over the next several years. Each of the workshops in Deia that I have attended (three total), were led by master stonemason, Lluc Mir, Founder of the Gremi de Margers .
By Andrea Hurd November 1, 2025
Today, the Monarch butterfly migration that goes from Canada and the Northern Continental US, to their overwintering sites in Central Mexico is just about completed. November 1st also coincides with the annual Dia de los Muertos celebrations, observed in Mexico, the US, and other parts of the world. This annual return of the Monarch butterflies to their winter home is interpreted by the Purépecha of Michoacán and the Mazahua of Estado de México as the ancestors returning to visit their loved ones still on earth. The sheer number of butterflies, amounting to the millions, amassing in the Oyamil Fir trees of the region is reported to be stunning as well as magical. It is no wonder that in Mexico, people are inspired by the visually stunning return of the Monarchs as a connection between the butterflies and their ancestors returning home.
By Andrea Hurd October 25, 2025
“Love is like a butterfly: It goes where it pleases and it pleases wherever it goes.” — Anonymous

Start your garden journey 

Finding your home in nature starts with Mariposa. We work to connect you and your loved ones with outdoor spaces, creating a garden together that is both beautiful and ecologically sound. 

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