2024 Training Program Graduate Spotlight

A Small Space for All:

An Ecological Gardener’s Story in Bringing Nature Home

Welcoming its fourth year in 2025, the Ecological Gardener Training Program with Waxwing EcoWorks brings together hands-on skill-building and in-depth exploration of our relationship with the natural world. Over 16 weekly classes, the program equips community members with the tools to design and nurture healthy habitat gardens while advocating for the wellbeing of our local ecosystems.

As we begin enrolling the next cohort of Ecological Gardener trainees, we checked in on one of our 2024 graduates, Susan, who is using what she learned in the program to transform her property near Lancaster, PA into an oasis for native biodiversity.


It’s a typical drive through the Lancaster countryside to get to Susan’s home outside of Strasburg. Little floating islands of rural suburbia wade in a sea of cropland and pasture. A tale of two landscapes unfolds out here: farmland and lawn. We might consider the tractor a keystone species in this human-made ecosystem. 

But pulling up to Susan’s property, I’m caught by a change of scenery. I dock my vessel on a special island where the tractor is losing ground, literally.

A tawny carpet of leaf litter sweeps across the front slope where, just a month ago, turfgrass reigned supreme.

It’s the antithesis of seasonal lawn care. Rather than being diligently raked and hauled away, these leaves are here to stay: the foundation of fecundity; an ecosystem-in-progress. 

In eco-gardening parlance, Susan’s steep, northwest-facing front lawn is inspired by sedge meadow ecology. Over 1700 plugs poke out of the leaf mulch like tacks on a corkboard, now setting roots for next spring’s growth. This community consists of four different species of sedges (Carex spp.) peppered with showier characters like red cardinal flower (Lobelia cardinalis), eastern beebalm (Monarda bradburiana), hairy beardtongue (Penstemon hirsutus) and, fittingly, Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia fulgida var. deamii). Such an arrangement was intentional for this highly visible space, balancing splendid variation and density with a garden-like presentation apropos for the public gaze.

Susan–who likes to go by Susie–tells me that the planting has already stirred curiosity from neighbors. She welcomes the conversations as a way to encourage folks to see our living spaces anew. “Native gardening promotes dialogue and encourages people to react in a different way,” she tells me later on, reflecting on how her experience in the Horn Farm’s Ecological Gardener Training Program expanded her perspective on the power of a small planted space. In this residential setting, she sees an opportunity to foster not just ecological health, but a revival of our relationship with nature: a pathway toward more positive, healing interaction with the land and each other.

Setting Roots and Sending Shoots

Like many folks who find their way into the rabbit hole of ecological restoration, Susie has always been fond of natural spaces. An avid hiker and frequenter of local preserves, curiosity brought her to the Lancaster Conservancy’s Habitat Advocate Classes in 2023. These experiences helped transform her appreciation into conviction about the importance of reviving nature in ecologically bereft spaces (read: lawns). 

Newly retired and ready to take action, she decided to enroll in the Horn Farm’s 2024 Ecological Gardener Training Program (EGTP). From February through May, 2024, weekly classes and field trips helped her move from tinkering with native plants at home to making intentional and informed design choices. When it came to the personal project that students undertake in the course, Susie’s focus was a shoe-in. She would set aside part of her yard to apply design tips and install a planting. In the ensuing months, the project would take off like any landscape spared of the tractor blade: blossoming exponentially. 

And so here I was, admittedly baffled when Susie led me first to the backyard to start our property tour. As it turns out, her sedge meadow slope is only the latest iteration in a yard-wide vision launched by the EGTP. In fact, the slope is the product of hiring on the Waxwing EcoWorks team; the rest of the yard is her own enterprise. Around back we visit a 700 sq ft area bordering the property corner–her “original” project site–now covered likewise with a thick carpet of mulch.

With the enthusiasm of a composer explaining her score, Susie conveys to me how the EGTP gave her the rudiments she needed to make work like this more approachable and digestible–to take ownership over something that seemed like a landscaper’s specialty. “It feels much better than taking a shot in the dark” she tells me. In rhythm with the hands-on lessons covered by the course, Susie got to work at home: measuring out the space, calculating plug counts, sheet mulching (localizing the impact by sourcing wood chips from down the road), testing the soil, assessing land use history, and observing the area’s ecological indicators to whittle down a plant palette.

I’m enamored by her self-assurance and excitement as we study her designs: a preview of what’s to come. For Susie, a big plus of the EGTP was bringing the otherwise esoteric concept of “design,” down to earth. Many aspiring eco-gardeners are paralyzed before they begin, mired in questions about where to place plants, how to space them, how they’ll behave, and, of course, what on earth to put in the ground.

Through the EGTP, Susie figured out how to navigate the overwhelm of options, coming up with a design that integrates function, habitat value, and year-around enjoyment.

It was far from desk work. When we talk about bringing “design” down to earth, we mean it literally.

A crucial part of Susie’s process was visiting local preserves with similar qualities in the baseline landscape: glimpses of what her property, centuries ago, might have looked like. She borrowed inspiration from the Lancaster Conservancy’s Shiprock Woods Nature Preserve alongside native meadowlands managed historically by fire. Coupling these references with the current state of her space, which bears a legacy of agricultural use, she arrived at a point of clarity about what her mini-habitat would be best equipped to host, and maybe even aspire to.

The resulting design is a thoughtful arrangement of 14 species. Different layers (from groundcovers to understory trees) allow her to maximize the square footage for biodiversity. Touchingly, the vision includes a seating space to enjoy the garden up close and personal–another echo of the training program’s teachings. In designing spaces for ecological health, we’re not just setting aside parcels of nature: we’re allowing ourselves to be part of the healing. We’re not ecological islands, after all. 

Diverse Refugia, all at Home

Any ecological gardener will tell you that sheet-mulching a lawnscape is enormously satisfying. Susie is no exception; in fact, with extra mulch and cardboard to spare, the process became infectious. What began as a relatively isolated project to mend a corner patch of her yard has now threaded its way into a quilt of activities across the property, including a natural border along the property line, re-designed landscaping around the back patio, and, of course, the whole front yard with her new friends at Waxwing.

One can venture to guess that 30-40% of the landscape is now set aside for ecological gardening bliss.  

As we survey these other works-in-progress, Susie shares with me another lesson gleaned from the EGTP. Even a modest-sized property like hers has its fair share of microhabitats. Little patches of yard here and there might have subtle differences in hydrology, soil drainage, shade, contour, and direction–all ecological “foundations” that suggest the suite of plants best suited for one area versus another. Inspired by the EGTP’s field trips to local reference landscapes, Susie took notice of the surprising variations that span her home turf. She closely observed existing conditions and found parallels within local habitats and plant communities. Rather than imposing her whimsy on the land, she has relied on the land’s wisdom to guide decisions.

There are many pathways for restoring a piece of earth, but when we build relationships with landscapes around us and listen, we’ll find that we’re not alone as restoration designers.

And so, in just a few steps, we move from a planned patch of shade-tolerant shrubs to a “hot and dry” exposed strip warranting meadow species. The area around the patio stacks even more functions, with a plan to install clumping grasses, buttonbushes (Cephalanthus occidentalis), and arrowwood viburnums (Viburnum dentatum) that can provide a natural buffer from runoff while dispersing water flows to other areas of the property. Wrapping up our stroll at the sedge-meadow hillside where we began, I can’t help but think of what this will look like in just a few year’s time. Take a sizable hike through multiple ecological communities, and condense it to a few paces around a house. A spot of refuge for a whole region, in a time when nature needs all the refuge it can get.

For all the savory nuances of design, reference landscapes, and plants, the lesson here is simple:

Plants are valuable allies for the shared well being of ourselves and the natural spaces we depend on, even in the smallest patch of land.

Like a heap of scraps becoming compost, just another area of turfgrass in tractor heaven is being deliberately turned over to the benefit of all life. As Susie puts it to me, the Ecological Gardener Training Program helped her see the potential of “taking small spaces and making them better for the world.”

Susie waters her front yard sedge meadow after site prep and planting are completed with the help of Waxwing EcoWorks (image provided by Susie).

The Joy in the Little Worlds

The EGTP is an incredible resource for practical insight. But for most trainees, Susie included, it also inspires introspection. She now sees ecological gardening as more than just a means to a regenerative end. She sees it as a process: an unfolding interaction between humans and the nature of which we’re a part–a rediscovery of our place in the landscape, rather than above it. She is motivated by the notion of reparation: of paying back for our extractive relationship with the land. Overall, she sees ecological gardening as an act of love: an invitation to work with the land rather than against it. 

She recalls to me the transformation that emerged in her as the class progressed, inspired by the attention to detail that came with observing plants on the landscape:

“I learned how to see plants in a different way. All of a sudden, I was seeing all the things I didn’t know I didn’t know.”

She jokingly shares with me how she can no longer take a casual stroll through meadow or forest, always pulled to the trail’s edge by another fascinating seed head; a pairing of plants; the finer elegance of those common species often overlooked in their ubiquity: of mayapples, Virginia waterleaf, and meadow grasses. Seeing all of this beauty in the seemingly mundane underlines her commitment to bring nature home, and she feels this is a deeper gift of the program–that invitation to deep noticing, which may be just as healing to people as the action we take to restore the land.

I stop to take a picture of Susie posing in front of her sedge meadow slope. Below to my left, I catch a glimpse of something peculiar in the basal green of a wild violet (a volunteer, but welcome in a place like this). We peer in to sight a red caterpillar circled with black studs like cactus needles. Susie gasps with exhilaration, and in that moment I can hear the truth of the love she’s told me about. “That’s a fritillary!” she exclaims. A variegated fritillary (Euptoieta claudia) like this has piqued her interest before; she spotted one while going about her eco-gardening routines some time ago, and it spurred her into a flurry of research. She’s always interested in learning more about who she’s building habitat for.

Just a few short steps from the road, a variegated fritillary caterpillar (Euptoieta claudia) happily munches away in Susie’s front yard meadow planting.

“I’ve already seen, even at the beginning, more happy critters here than I’ve seen before.”

That’s a promising foretelling for an island of biodiversity that’s only just starting to bloom. And with the help of the Ecological Gardener Training Program, more and more folks across the region are planting refuges like this, and not just independent homeowners like Susie. Ecological landscaping professionals, community doers, teachers, and advocates are popping up like plugs in leaf mulch, all inspired to turn the tide and re-balance our relationship with the wild spaces we depend on.

It’s only a matter of time before little islands like Susie’s merge into a continent.


Join the Ecological Gardener Training Program in 2025!

Registrations close on Monday, January 27th at 12PM EST.

Over 16 weeks of hands-on learning with our educational partner Waxwing EcoWorks, trainees dig deep into designing and nurturing native plant habitat to help build back biodiversity in the places we live, work, and play. Learn more and let us know you’re interested at hornfarmcenter.org/ecological-gardener-training/

Scholarships are available to offset program costs.

Trainees in the 2024 Ecological Gardener Training Program. Image courtesy of Elyse Jurgen (Waxwing EcoWorks)

About the Author: Andrew Leahy

Growing up in the foothills of Ricketts Glen State Park, Andrew spent his early life in the embrace of Northeastern PA forests, sowing the seeds for his ongoing enchantment with the natural world and its stewardship. While studying English and Music Composition at Muhlenberg College, he gravitated toward nonprofit engagement as a work study student in the college’s Office of Community Engagement. Now, going on three years at the Horn Farm Center, Andrew manages social media, develops and teaches educational programs, coordinates volunteer events, and collaborates on marketing projects, large events, and organizational capacity-building. Through all of this, he is a dedicated student of the land, with a life’s mission of learning (and providing spaces for others to learn) about bioregional ecology, regenerative agriculture, permaculture, foraging, and locally-focused ways of living in reciprocal relationship with nature. Andrew has completed the Horn Farm’s Land Steward Training Program (2023), Ecological Gardener Training Program (2024), and teaches monthly foraging walks, alongside co-teaching the Horn Farm’s new Forager Training Program.


Horn Farm Happenings – November 27, 2024

With Gratitude & Excitement

Today, we’d like to share a heartfelt THANK YOU to 74 donors who helped us get one step closer to building a new Education Center. Together, we raised over $15,000 for our Building Fund during Lancaster ExtraGive! We are so grateful for their commitment to grow land-based, community education at the Horn Farm Center.A special thanks to our matching sponsors, Richards Energy Group and the Lisa Naples Team at Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Homesale Realty, as well as all the generous local businesses and organizations that support Lancaster ExtraGive, including the Lancaster County Community Foundation, High Foundation, Murry Foundation, and Steinman Foundation.

Last week’s “friend-raising” was an incredible start! We still have several months and $185,000 to go to reach our goal and Rebuild Horn Farm. 

If you didn’t have a chance to donate on Friday, there still time give a tax-deductible contribution this year. If you can’t contribute financially there are other ways to support our efforts to build a new learning center and better serve our community.

To learn more about this project and how you can help, visit rebuildhornfarm.com

Let’s build a new education center together – brick by brick at the Horn Farm!


As we gather around our tables this season, the Horn Farm Center board and staff would like to share our gratitude to those who champion our mission and work on the land: our program participants, volunteers, donors, sponsors and farm partners.

We are also grateful to the farmers and farm workers whose tireless efforts make our daily meals possible. We celebrate the land stewards who are restoring ecological health for future generations. We honor the Indigenous peoples who have cared for these lands for millennia, and continue to apply their traditional ecological knowledge to sustain and restore the natural world.


Become a Skilled Land Steward

Want to make a positive ecological impact in your community? We invite you to participate in our signature training programs at the Horn Farm Center! Now is the time to register and start training for a regenerative future!Whether you are seeking to deepen your relationship with the natural world or want to gain practical skills to advance your career, all participants will learn how to be confident land stewards.

Don’t miss your chance to become a well-rounded caretaker of the natural world.
No prior knowledge or experience is required to participate.  


Shop with a Mission in Mind

Just in time for the holiday season, the Horn Farm Center’s online store is open!

Shop from our signature “What Would Nature Do?” t-shirts and “Wild & Uncommon” merchandise.  Horn Farm’s organically-grown garlic is also available!

Looking for other gift ideas? Give the gift of a unique learning experience. We offer gift certificates for Horn Farm Center classes and workshops!

All proceeds benefit educational programs and regenerative practices at the Horn Farm Center. 


Buzzing with Sweet Rewards

Beekeeping is more than just a hobby; it’s a beneficial practice that boosts local ecosystems by supporting pollination and bee populations. It also offers sweet rewards such as honey, beeswax, and pollen, which can fuel a small business or be used for personal consumption.

Next year, we are hosting our 10th Beekeeper Training Program at the Horn Farm Center. Taught by professional apiarist Mark Gingrich, the program explores all aspects of beekeeping from the science behind this fascinating practice to managing a hive at home.

Learn alongside a community of budding beekeepers, diving deep into all aspects of the practice. The program is held once a month from January-October.

At the end of the first year, you will take home your own bee colony. In year two, you’ll have the option to further grow your skills with advanced techniques.

Register now to join next year’s cohort of beekeepers. The 2025 Beekeeping program begins on January 22, 2025


Winter Willow Harvest

The winter weather signals the start of our annual willow harvest at the Horn Farm. We invite you to join us –  to enjoy the outdoors and learn while helping on the farm.

Coppicing is a tradition steeped in history and serves as a powerful reminder of our ancestral ties. Learn about producing willow for basketry by coppicing, sorting, and bundling willow branches as part of our annual winter harvest.

Discover the unique attributes of this regenerative agroforestry crop that helps to cycle carbon and protect our waterways.  Sign up to learn, grow, and steward the land with us this winter.

Sign Up to Harvest

Help Us with an Extraordinary Need

Help Us Meet an Extraordinary Need for Lancaster ExtraGive

Ecological learning needs your support! Donate today to help us build a new Education Center and provide MORE hands-on experiences than ever before at the Horn Farm Center.

We’ve always been a grassroots organization. Even with the loss of our farmhouse three years ago, we’ve remained rooted in land-based learning, serving folks in Lancaster, York, and beyond!

Your contribution will help us overcome our biggest challenge yet. Our new education center is within reach. With your help, we can achieve our dream and “Rebuild Horn Farm” together.

Our donation page is now live – you can give at anytime today until midnight. And, starting at 9am, you can double your impact when you donate to the Horn Farm Center for ExtraGive, thanks to Richards Energy Group.

Help us build for a regenerative future at the Horn Farm Center, brick by brick!

Click Here to Donate!