Ecosystem Regeneration Artisans

Ecosystem Regeneration Artisans Since 2017, woman-owned business.
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A regenerative landscaping company focused on the re-establishment of indigenous plants and water-wise landscapes to help mitigate flash flooding and protect local ecosystems.

06/12/2026

Important! Soil compaction is very common in neighborhoods because heavy equipment was used to prepare the site and build the home.

Absolutely excellent read!
06/08/2026

Absolutely excellent read!

This is "easier" to manage because it doesn't need to be mowed every week or watered (ever) or fertilized (ever) and w**ds aren't much of an issue (mostly black medic on the edges and some siberian elm seedlings).

It's NOT "easier" because someone can't be hired for $25 to take care of it every week for 10 minutes. And because you do need to know SOMETHING about each plant species -- like when it flowers, when it goes to seed, how it reproduces, how large it gets, how long it's anticipated to live, what will replace it when it goes, what's a "w**d" and what isn't.

This landscapes does clean and cool the air far more effectively than a close-clipped monoculture lawn. It reduces flooding. It certainly provides more habitat for everything one could think of, including ticks and mosquitoes but also birds and butterflies and bees and beetles and spiders.

Because it's edge habitat -- the nature of a small suburban lot that borders woods and has trees on it -- there is preferred tick habitat (damp / cool shade near sunlight). If it was 100% open sunny meadow there'd be fewer ticks. But yes, nature exists here. And because we have so little nature left in urban and suburban areas we have issues with heat island effects, polluted air, flooding, etc, as well as a loss of contact with beneficial microbes that would reduce allergy development in young kids. Plus, creative play in more diverse landscapes increases cognitive and emotional behavior in kids (something cleaning and cooling the air also does).

I've written about this in all of my books, including the new one coming out in 2027. I've shared titles of books and research on these topics found in the appendix of my books.

But it doesn't matter. We're a very propagandized culture. Who benefits from stoking our fear of nature and wildness? What is less healthy -- being bitten by a bug or walking on treated lawn with no cover from hot summer sun? (That might depend a bit on allergies perhaps.)

You're here because to some degree you already agree with most things posted on this page about habitat, lawns, climate, extinction, etc. And while a lawn converted to native plant garden is not a religion that needs to meet a quota, we do need more of us woken to the issues, about acting locally, and seeing how empowered we are and in turn how liberated we can be when we start rethinking pretty.

Because lawn is a very, very recent phenomenon in western society, and especially in the United States. And especially suburbs and lawns within suburbs. Lawn hasn't always been the way. It's not intractable. It's also not sustainable. Similar things can be said about governments and laws and policies and thus beliefs.

We are transient -- and perhaps that transience makes us clutch to the most simplified narratives in our lives all that much more. Stability is not found in the lines of a green carpet, but in the organic free-form of fractal equations replicating with the power of sunlight and the interdependent community of wildlife that has literally given us our lives.

Plant something. I dare you. And prairie up in all the ways.

We're all part of a watershed! Do you know your watershed's name? It's your address in terms of water, but very few peop...
05/06/2026

We're all part of a watershed! Do you know your watershed's name? It's your address in terms of water, but very few people know theirs.

Our headquarters may be in San Marcos, but we're actually part of the Blanco River watershed!

Food for thought: why do we call it a watershed? Do we really want our land to "shed" precious water?

In other parts of the world, like Australia, they call these water catchment areas.

The language: "We're part of the Blanco River's catchment area" feels like a much better way to think about water!

The words we use shape our thoughts, which shape our actions!

Celebrating 🎉 National Teacher Appreciation Day and Teacher Appreciation Week with a heartfelt thanks to our Texas educators!

The TWDB offers engaging K-12 water-related education activities for the water cycle, watersheds, water conservation, and much more!

Check out our resources at www.twdb.texas.gov/kids. 💻

05/01/2026

Make It Rain May Native Plant Sale Milkw**ds available! So many plants are blooming like crazy with all this rain. Now is a great time to come see the rainbow of flowers in our nursery and gardens!

Rain gardens filling makes us feel like kids on Christmas! 😁🎉🎄🎁 We have trouble sleeping wondering how much rain we'll r...
05/01/2026

Rain gardens filling makes us feel like kids on Christmas! 😁🎉🎄🎁 We have trouble sleeping wondering how much rain we'll receive and get up early to check how much our rain gardens filled.

It's a great feeling to know that every drop we caught is going into the earth to recharge the groundwater and help the plants (plus 🐦& 🦋) in this yard thrive.

Lawns shed water and that creates 3 major problems:

🌱the soil doesn't get saturated or retain water so plants need help with an irrigation system 😰

🌊 Runoff water flows to the street, storm drains, then creeks and rivers quickly, creating flash flooding downstream 😱

☠️ Herbicides, fertilizer, pesticides and p**p wash off the surface of the land and go unfiltered into local waterways, which we swim in and drink from 🤮

We need to adjust our mindset. 🤯 "Wastewater" combines 2 words that should never go together. Our most precious resource can't be dismissed as something to get rid of.

Even the term "watershed" implies that the point is to get rid of water. In Australia, "watershed" areas are referred to as "catchment" areas. 🤓

Shifting our thinking from "waste" to "harvest" and "watershed" to "catchment" helps change our relationship with water from a dismissive relationship to a friendship. 💑

Make friends with water and keep it close by building rain gardens! They're a beautiful solution to both drought 🏜️🪾and flash flooding 💦🌊.

With Rainscapes we go beyond water conservation:
💧Use less water for irrigation
💧Eliminate the need for noisy lawn equipment in our neighborhoods
💧Create habitat for birds, butterflies and other wildlife
💧 Mitigate flooding in downstream communities
💧Recharge the local groundwater
💧 Cultivate lush, cool spaces
💧Stop pollution that flows from lawns to waterways
💧Solve drainage problems around homes
💧Reduce mosquitoes by creating a trap where they lay their eggs but don't have time to mature into adults (rain gardens sink water into the soil in under 48 hours)

With one attractive yard feature we have the power to counter the effects of our 3 worst water problems: drought, flash flooding and pollution.

Change is possible! Dig it 🤠

Come see thriving rain gardens, hear all the birds, marvel at all the butterflies, chat with our friendly and knowledgeable staff, and pick up native plants and water conservation tools during our Make It Rain May Native Plant Sale!

This is our last installation of the Spring 2026 planting season, so it's the absolute BEST time to join our clients for a design this summer so we can be ready to install your rain gardens during our Fall 2026 planting season.

We hope to see you joining the grassroots movement to:

Slow water down!
Spread water out!
Sink water in!

This is how we regenerate our water cycle together.

There is nothing quite like getting plants in just before the rain! Baby Lilly was so excited for planting day.
05/01/2026

There is nothing quite like getting plants in just before the rain!

Baby Lilly was so excited for planting day.

Key info!
04/30/2026

Key info!

You can mitigate the impacts of climate change in your own yard!

Learn how to protect and increase soil organic matter with “Building a Healthy Soil to Reduce Climate Change,” an educational program made by GEAA Technical Director Debbie Reid. This guide reviews what healthy soil is, what the benefits are, and how to improve soil health through proper landscaping practices in your own yard.

Download the full guide here:
https://aquiferalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Building-a-Healthy-Soil.pdf

A lot changes in a day with ERA! Our super crew and powerful machines get it done. We dug this entire rain garden, inclu...
04/29/2026

A lot changes in a day with ERA!

Our super crew and powerful machines get it done.

We dug this entire rain garden, including digging out some MASSIVE rocks, and made sure our inflow and outflow dry creeks have enough river rocks in them to be ready for a potential downpour tomorrow!

We're so excited to get this irrigated, planted, mulched and accented with beautiful river rocks, moss rocks and a crushed granite path.

When we wash off the native limestones that we dug out of the rain garden basin, they're going to look absolutely stunning.

Stay tuned to see the finished rainscape!

For a chance to see some fully grown rain gardens visit us this Saturday (May 2nd) for the Make It Rain May Native Plant Sale !

Our design season is coming up, so if you need your own rain garden and don't want to do the back breaking labor of digging it yourself, schedule a consultation through our website to start the rainscape process.

Address

326 N LBJ Drive Suite #168
San Marcos, TX
78666

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

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