About Us
Wild Mint Gardens helps people create beautiful, inviting, productive, and low maintenance gardens in the Teton region. We believe that gardens and gardeners hold tremendous potential to protect native flora and fauna, conserve natural resources, build community, enhance biodiversity, and spread joy. This belief-paired with permaculture principles-guides us in designing gardens that complement your lifestyle, consider the ecological context of your site, and match your aesthetic preferences. We tend towards the ‘wild’ aesthetic as we believe that nature’s design is unrivaled.
Our designs prioritize resource and water conservation as well as native plantings to support native wildlife. We specialize in integrating edible and medicinal species into your landscape and know that you will delight in harvesting their yields. Designing with plants that provide fruit, vegetables, herbs, and flowers invites you and those you love to connect deeply with the land and supports the biodiversity that nourishes the whole system.
We look forward to collaborating with you and creating your dream garden! Let’s walk the wonderfully winding path that is designing with nature.
Email us at hello@wildmintgardens.com to get started!
Wild Mint acknowledges that it conducts business on the ancestral and unceded territories of the Shoshone-Bannock, Gros Ventre, Nez Perce and Crow peoples, who have stewarded this land for time immemorial.
Founder and Designer Lucille Wright
After earning a M.S. in Natural Resource Conservation from the University of Montana, Lucille’s work focused on collaborative land management, conservation agriculture, food access, and rural livelihoods. These experiences led her to recognize the incredible potential that private landowners hold to provide vital habitat for native flora and fauna. After earning a Permaculture Design Certificate and becoming a certified garden consultant, Lucille founded Wild Mint Gardens in 2025 to help residential and commercial clients create beautiful and bountiful ecological sanctuaries. She has been gardening in the Tetons since 2006 and is filled with glee when a plant makes someone smile.