Karen for Nature

Karen for Nature Karen for Nature designs and installs sustainable native plant landscapes for any yard or project.

01/26/2026

I arrived in Florida late last week and spent a few days orienting to my new surroundings. I was even welcomed to the campground by a pair of hawks as I unhooked my camper.

While Virginia was buried under a winter snowstorm, I was exploring new ground and easing into a very different (and warm šŸ˜Ž) landscape.

I spent the weekend getting to know St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge and I can’t wait to share what I found.

At first glance, it reads like infrastructure.A road, the river, power lines cutting the sky.....It takes a moment to no...
01/13/2026

At first glance, it reads like infrastructure.

A road, the river, power lines cutting the sky.....

It takes a moment to notice the nest perched at the top, built into the margins of what we made. Not because we planned for it, but because life, especially nature, adapts faster than our awareness.

Every design choice sends ripples outward.
Some we notice immediately. Some only after we slow down enough to really look.

Water remembers.Trees respond.The land settles into what works.Every action leaves a trace.This is where this week begin...
01/12/2026

Water remembers.
Trees respond.
The land settles into what works.

Every action leaves a trace.
This is where this week begins.

This week kept circling back to the same quiet truth.Water moving the way it always does. Infrastructure that works best...
01/09/2026

This week kept circling back to the same quiet truth.

Water moving the way it always does. Infrastructure that works best when it expects that movement. Birds pausing, then lifting off, when the moment is right.

Nothing here is rushed. Nothing is forced.

The systems that last aren’t the ones trying to dominate the landscape. They’re the ones that understand when to hold still and when to move on.

That upward tilt and open bill isn’t a call or a yawn.It’s part of recovery. A quiet reset after effort. After diving in...
01/08/2026

That upward tilt and open bill isn’t a call or a yawn.

It’s part of recovery. A quiet reset after effort. After diving in cooler water, anhingas perch, angle their heads upward, and open their bills to help regulate body temperature before the next hunt.

Unlike most water birds, anhingas don’t have fully waterproof feathers, making this recovery period essential.

So much of nature happens in these in-between moments. Not the hunt. Not the flight. But the pause that makes the next one possible.

A Juvenile Black-crowned Night-Heron. They don’t wear the sleek gray and black of adulthood yet. For their first year, j...
01/01/2026

A Juvenile Black-crowned Night-Heron.

They don’t wear the sleek gray and black of adulthood yet. For their first year, juveniles carry this mottled brown and white plumage, built to disappear into reeds and shadowed wetlands.

Notice it standing on one leg. That posture usually signals rest. Herons do this to conserve energy and heat while remaining alert.

Unlike most herons, Black-crowned Night-Herons hunt primarily at dusk and at night. Seeing one paused like this during the day often means the surrounding habitat offers enough cover and safety to rest.

I visited Providence Canyon State Park, often called Georgia’s Little Grand Canyon.This place wasn’t shaped by ancient r...
12/29/2025

I visited Providence Canyon State Park, often called Georgia’s Little Grand Canyon.

This place wasn’t shaped by ancient rivers or glaciers. It formed after forests were cleared and land was mismanaged in the 1800s, allowing rain and wind to carve deep scars into the soil, some of the canyons are over 150ft. The people making those choices never imagined this would be the result generations later.

It’s a powerful reminder that landscapes are shaped by choices.
What story will our actions tell 200 years from now?

This winter, I packed up my trailer and hit the road with a specific purpose. I’m currently in Georgia, traveling while ...
12/28/2025

This winter, I packed up my trailer and hit the road with a specific purpose.

I’m currently in Georgia, traveling while writing my book, collecting information, images, and on-the-ground evidence of how land responds to our choices. Not from reports or models, but from the landscapes themselves.

Every place tells a story if you slow down long enough to listen.

Over the coming days, I’ll be sharing what I’m seeing. Not just where I am, but what the land is teaching me about soil, water, habitat, and the long memory of ecosystems.

This is research in motion. Field notes from the road.

10/21/2025

Without native plants, these transformations would never happen. šŸ›+🌿=šŸ¦‹

In this short clip from one of my presentations, I show just a few of the countless caterpillars that depend entirely on native plants to survive and the incredible adults they become.

Every yard planted with natives becomes a lifeboat for biodiversity!

10/20/2025

Exciting news — my article Victory Gardens for Nature has just been published! This marks my fourth publication in 2025, and I couldn’t be more grateful to keep spreading this message.

The piece explores how reimagining our backyards as ā€œVictory Gardensā€ for biodiversity can make a measurable difference in restoring ecosystems and drawing down carbon.

Every garden matters. Every plant has power. Every person part of the solution.

Pages 8-12

https://www.sierraclub.org/sites/default/files/2025-10/fall-2025_1.pdf

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