Home & Garden
Here Are The Best Native Plants For Milpitas Gardens
It's gardening season. Here are the plants that grow naturally in Milpitas and what birds they attract.

MILPITAS, CA — Planting season, as Milpitas gardeners know, is officially upon us. And before you dig out those dusty trowels and gloves, take note of the plants that naturally grow in the area. We're talking about native plants, which grew here long before Europeans started building settlements. They're the foundation of the region's biodiversity, and provide key food sources and shelter to birds.
Fortunately the folks at the National Audubon Society have done all the hard work to ensure gardeners have what they need to find the best native plants. The group has a database that includes perennials, shrubs, grasses, succulents, trees, vines and evergreens. Each entry also details what types of birds the plants attract.
The database allows users to filter results by plant type, resources and bird species they attract.
Regional Audubon experts hand-select the "best results" for each. In Milpitas, some of the best flowers to grow this season include Blue Elderberry, which attracts thrushes, crows and waxwings.
Find out what's happening in Milpitasfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Large, perennial, and deciduous, this shrub or small tree can grow up to 30 feet tall. It produces yellow or cream colored flowers in the spring and purple berries in the fall that provide an important food source for birds. This plant grows in full sun and partial shade, and in moist, well-drained soils.
Here are places you can find native plants:
Find out what's happening in Milpitasfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
- Middlebrook Gardens Nursery on 76 Race Street in San Jose
- Capitol Wholesale Nursery at 2938 Everdale Drive in San Jose
Americans spent a record $47.8 billion on lawn and garden retail sales in 2017, according to the National Gardening Survey. The average household spent more than $500 on gardening. And while older adults accounted for 35 percent of all gardeners, millennials were getting their hands and knees dirty at all-time high levels. Adults 18-34 accounted for 29 percent of all gardeners, the survey found.
Among the recent trends — more people are investing in raised beds as opposed to digging holes, and they're spending money on apps rather than glossy gardening books.
—Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.