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Lakamas Landscape Design
Landscape Design for Seattle and Camano Island
Where Artistry Meets Ecology
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Anna's Hummingbirds in the Winter Garden
Anna’s hummingbirds don’t migrate. They stay. Through freezing nights, cold rain, and short days, relying entirely on what the landscape can still provide. Which makes winter the most honest season for understanding whether a garden truly works.

Jonna Semke
Jan 112 min read


The Tiny Singer of Cascadia: Welcoming the Pacific Chorus Frog to the Garden
Where Pacific Chorus Frogs live, how they overwinter, how to encourage the vernal pools they adore, and what these frogs contribute to an ecologically vibrant landscape.

Jonna Semke
Dec 11, 20255 min read


Winter Garden Natives: Evergreen Structure for the Seattle and Camano Island Landscape
Lakamas Winter Design Series James Roof Silktassel blooms in the winter with long icicle-like tendrils Winter reveals the true bones of a landscape. In Seattle and Camano Island, where soft light and cool, wet soils define the season, native evergreens bring essential structure, texture, and ecological function. Thoughtfully chosen evergreen shrubs and groundcovers create a layered, winter-ready framework that feels deeply tied to the region. Below is a focused look at native

Jonna Semke
Dec 2, 20254 min read


Winter Beauty: Deciduous Trees and Shrubs in the Seattle and Camano Island Garden
Discover how deciduous trees, shrubs, and groundcovers create winter structure in Pacific Northwest gardens. Part 3 of our Winter Design Series.

Jonna Semke
Nov 30, 20252 min read


The Best Time to Design and Plant a Garden in Seattle and Camano Island
The Best Time to Design and Plant a Garden in Seattle and Camano Island Winter Design Series If you’ve been thinking about refreshing your landscape—or starting from scratch—there is a right time to begin. In the Pacific Northwest, two seasons rise above the rest for creating resilient, beautiful gardens: fall and early spring . Each brings unique advantages, especially when we’re designing with ecology, long-term plant health, and the natural rhythms of our climate in mind.

Jonna Semke
Nov 30, 20253 min read


Creating Wildlife Habitat Using Landscape Design
Tiger swallowtail butterfly Creating Wildlife Habitat I got into gardening with native plants when I realized a few things: we are losing native wildlife species quickly, and I didn't know there were native plants that could be used in the garden. Additionally, I couldn't find the ones I learned about. Today I'll write a bit about creating wildlife habitat intentionally through garden design. Since then, gardening with native plants has become a movement embraced by many gar

Jonna Semke
Nov 24, 20252 min read


Winter Structure: The Quiet Architecture of the Garden
Lakamas Winter Design Series Evergreens are particularly strong in the winter landscape Winter is the season when the true architecture of a garden comes into focus. Without the lush foliage and colorful blooms of summer, we are left with form, line, texture, and shadow—the essential structure that gives a landscape its identity. In the Pacific Northwest, where winter light is soft and the palette becomes more subdued, structure becomes especially important. It creates comfor

Jonna Semke
Nov 19, 20253 min read


Acer circinatum - Vine Maple
🌿 Acer circinatum — Vine Maple Red fall color with yellow and green - superb! It's fall, and what a great time to talk about Vine Maples (Acer circinatum). This small tree is perfect for an urban or suburban yard, or really, just about any yard. It does everything you ask of it - fall colors of orange, reds and yellows, and I'd say just as wonderful, lime green spring leaves that unfurl with red petioles and samaras (those adorable winged seeds). I love the color contrast, w

Jonna Semke
Nov 5, 20253 min read
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