Collection: Cajun Prairie Heritage | The Acadian Dooryard Garden

The Cajuns Came to Louisiana With Nothing But Memory — And They Planted It

When the Acadians arrived on the Gulf Coast prairies of Southwest Louisiana in the late 1700s, expelled from their homeland in Nova Scotia and scattered across a continent, they brought with them a fierce, practical knowledge of the land. They looked at the Louisiana prairie — so different from the tidal marshes of Maritime Canada — and they found what they knew: plants to eat, plants to heal, plants to shade a porch and feed a family through a long Gulf Coast summer.

The Cajun dooryard garden became one of the most distinctive horticultural traditions in North America — a layered, productive, beautiful mix of native and adopted plants tended by generations of Cajun grandmothers with an instinct for what grows and what gives. The Heirloom Fig, Sweet Bay Magnolia, Turk's Cap, and Partridge Pea in this collection all carry the fingerprints of that tradition — plants that fed the bees, shaded the gallery, filled the preserving jars, and marked the seasons of Cajun prairie life for two hundred years.

Grow them the way they were always grown — close to the house, close to the kitchen, close to the heart.

Plants in this collection: Heirloom Fig · Partridge Pea · Sweet Bay Magnolia · Turk's Cap

All plants sold as live 1-gallon specimens, grown in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Descriptions are for horticultural and educational purposes only.

Cajun Prairie Heritage | The Acadian Dooryard Garden