Heritage Hill Homestead began as a family dream — a desire to slow down, learn from the land, and restore what belongs here.
On our eleven acres in the Georgia foothills, we’re growing more than plants. We’re growing connection — to soil, to memory, and to the rhythms of the seasons. What started as a homeschool garden has become Heritage Hill Natives, a small effort to bring native beauty back to our region one seed at a time.
Every plant we raise has a story: the wild Joe Pye that grew near my parent's river, the Maypop seeds passed down through family hands, Beautyberries from my Grandmother, the first orange azalea that bloomed at the edge of our pasture. These are pieces of home — reminders that restoration begins right where we are.
We grow and share native plants because they belong here — they feed the bees, shelter the birds, and heal the soil that holds us all.
“Planting the roots of restoration and remembrance — one native at a time.”
— Camille Sweeney, Heritage Hill Homestead
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