In Soil: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden, Dungy describes her years-long project to transform her weed-filled, water-hogging, monochromatic lawn in suburban Fort Collins, Colo., into a pollinator’s paradise, packed instead with vibrant, drought-tolerant native plants.
It took countless hours of backbreaking work: clearing her garden beds of hundreds of pounds of rock, amending the soil with compost and mulch, and turning the soil with shovel and pitchfork until she was drenched with sweat.
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She leads me on a tour of what she calls her backyard “prairie project,” which she’s filled with native grasses like blue grama and little bluestem, and with perennials that will flower later in the spring: penstemon, bee balm, baptisia, echinacea, Lewis flax.
Dungy shows me the tall dried grasses that she’s left standing from last season, along with the dead stalks from her milkweed and sunflowers. They stay up “to create winter interest,” she says, “but also a lot of the native pollinators will nest or plant their eggs and larvae under and around many of these native plants. So right now we have a very blonde garden!”
Such a wild, unmanicured garden was verboten in 2013, when Dungy first moved to Fort Collins with her husband and young daughter. The local homeowners’ association had a strict yard maintenance code that forbade anything that upset the homogeneous look of the neighborhood.
“In those early years,” Dungy writes in Soil, “a woman walked around the neighborhood with a ruler, measuring too-tall grass and what she considered unwieldy or weedy vegetation, reporting homeowners to the HOA board for review and possible censure.“
Now, those rules against “non-standard landscaping” have been eliminated: Fort Collins currently has an active initiative to encourage diversification of the landscape. “I was lucky,” she says, “in having moved to a town that created a space for that embrace.”
Dungy’s garden, in its glorious variety, attracts bees, butterflies, and all kinds of birds – goldfinches, pine siskins, nuthatches, chickadees – as well as mountain cottontail rabbits who nibble on her plants. (Her solution? Plant much more of everything.)
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In Soil, Dungy draws a connection between diversifying the plant life in her garden and diversifying the canon of nature writing. There is, she writes, “a pattern in nature writing that confounds and annoys me.” Dungy mentions writers such as Henry David Thoreau, John Muir and Edward Abbey, as well as Annie Dillard and Mary Oliver. “The (nearly always white) men and women who claim to be models for how to truly experience the natural world always seemed to do so in solitude,” she writes. “Just one guy – so often a guy – with no evidence of family or anyone to worry about but himself.”
As she thinks about that pattern, “I wonder who is excluded,” Dungy says. “These are all writers who are important and fascinating and write really key texts, and yet the absence of family and community troubles me.”
For Dungy, building a sustainable world necessarily involves family and community, not just a solitary meander through nature.
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As she nurtures her garden, Dungy – a Black woman living in a predominantly white city – says that thinking about land is, for her, inextricably linked with thinking about this country’s history, and about race. She’s constantly reminded of the labor of enslaved Black people who were forced to work the soil, and of the Native Americans forced from their lands.
“I can’t dig in my garden,” she writes, “without digging up all this old dirt.”
Yet that same act of digging in her garden also provides Dungy with welcome relief. For a politically-engaged person, “a garden can be a balm,” she says. “A garden can be a place of rest and beauty, and a retreat from that persistent, difficult work. But a garden also teaches me patience, and teaches me that … the work of a politically-engaged person often requires true patience. And the garden supports my belief that that patience can very frequently pay off.”