Since 2021, after reading Doug Tallamy's inspiring book, 'Nature's Best Hope,' Amy Campion has been turning her sunny, dry collector's garden into a garden for insects and other wildlife. She's planted many native trees and shrubs, such as cascara, chokecherry, flowering currant, Garry oak, madrone, oceanspray, osoberry, Scouler's willow, serviceberry, snowberry, and white alder. Native wildflowers include California poppy, early figwort, farewell-to-spring, goldenrod, gumweed, Pacific aster, Pacific waterleaf, poached egg plant, self-heal, and varileaf phacelia. She's provided additional habitat for insects in the form of a stumpery, a small pond, and cut stems.