Home of the Practically Perfect Pink Phlox and other native plants for pollinators
Showing posts with label Collinsia verna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Collinsia verna. Show all posts

Friday, March 20, 2015

Winter annuals for a native plant garden!

Two of my favorites, Entireleaf Western Daisy and
Blue-eyed Mary are showing off their attractive rosette stage.  (A Passalong Plant:Blue-eyed Mary)

We have a tendency to think of winter as a dormant season with plants at rest, but there really is a great deal of growing going on all winter. Just take a walk in your garden and you'll see signs of active life! Mosses, fungi and lichens are alive and thriving and the weedy winter annuals are reminding you that weeding isn't too far away! (go toThe Fascinating World of Fungi for more on them)
Edible Auricularia auricula/Jelly Ear growing on dead hardwood branch (January)
The stars of this post, Blue-eyed Mary and Entire leaf Western Daisy have been germinating and developing underneath the leaf litter in my garden. They both are cool season growers, are tolerant of really cold weather (and snow) and, are excellent reseeders in most gardens. By the way, that's how other winter annuals like Chickweed, Henbit, etc. get a toe hold in our gardens.
Astranthium integrifolium/Entireleaf Western Daisy

Entireleaf Western Daisy starts blooming in April (and keeps on going most of the summer). Blue-eyed Mary is also an April bloomer, but, blooms only for about three weeks. If pollinated, they set seed that matures and drops onto the garden soil where it has several months of warm stratification (necessary) before it germinates. I find they both germinate best in situ and you need to be on top of  the BEM in order to  harvest ripe seed, (it needs to be planted immediately).

Here's what works for me: Place a soil filled container near them to catch falling seeds; leave the container in the garden until the following late winter or early spring and then plant those seedlings when the ground is no longer frozen. Repeat to increase your collection.

Collinsia verna/Blue-eyed Mary
The only problem with these wonderful winter annuals is that they they aren't generally available at nurseries. I suspect that seed collection is a big issue. They're also rather fragile, especially Blue-eyed Mary, and that's not an ideal selling point. I know that GroWild (call them) had a few Collinsia verna/Blue-eyed Mary for sale. When it comes to Astranthium integrifolium/Entireleaf Western Daisy, unless you know me and live in Middle Tennessee, you may be plumb out of luck trying to find it.

I am hopeful that there will be blooms to show you later this spring, in the mean time, here's a peek at what's to come.


Happy Spring my friends.
xoxoGail

Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Forsythia! What Is It Good For?


Oh, my, the temptation to sing
Ab-So-Lutely Nuth-ing!
Is very strong.**
 Is that too harsh for flowers that glow against the collinsia blue sky for several weeks early in spring? Okay,  I will admit that it also has fine fall color. But, folks, you have to agree, that for the the rest of the year it is either a big green blob or a tangled mess of branches?


I admit, I am biased! Hedge and I have had at best an uneasy alliance. While, I appreciate that it's made a wonderful privacy screen for the front garden (especially for sitting on our screened front porch), it has hogged dominated the sunniest section of my garden. Nor does it appear to have much wildlife value~no visiting bees and no nesting birds.
Hedge is a yard  and sun hog
 Consequently, I have been chopping away* at H for years, planting shrubs that are not only beautiful in the spring and fall, but provide food and shelter for the critters that live in this garden. That's how this gardener rolls...I garden for wildlife!
'Grey Owl' junipers, native grasses, Crepe myrtles and even a fig tree

They just take so long to grow and I have to remind myself that Hedge didn't spring up over night!

xoxogail 

*and I will continue to chop away! 
** and a link to the song WAR

Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.

Monday, February 18, 2013

Collinsia verna, Where Are You?

I've looked everywhere for you, crawling on hands and knees through the wet clay, pulling back the leaf mulch, hoping to see the small seedlings that have always greeted me in February.
 You are nowhere to be found!
Collinsia verna  is a winter annual that can be found growing in rich deciduous woodlands 

Blue-Eyed Mary is a native winter annual that blooms in the Spring, sets seed in the summer, germinates in the fall and then starts growing in February.  

I love it and have my fingers crossed in hope that it's better at hiding than I am at searching.

~Although, the Blue-Eyed Mary was a no-show I did see
False Rue Anemone (Enemion biternatum ), always one of the first Spring ephemerals to bloom.


Early blooming daffodils.

Tommies!

An array of beautiful Hellebores.






Aren't they worth mucking about in the mud!

A few  Dandelions for the earliest  visiting honeybees.




Hamamelis 'Diane' holding court in the understory, and 

Slippery Elm glowing above it all.
~~~~~

Really, not bad for a chilly few days in the garden...

xoxogail

I am several days late for Garden Bloggers Bloom Day, but don't let that keep you from popping over to May Dreams Gardens to see what Carol is up to...

 Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Wildflower Wednesday 2012 Roundup

Verbesina virginica

Welcome to Clay and Limestone's 2012 Wildflower Wednesday December Roundup!  

Wildflower Wednesday is about sharing wildflowers/natives/naturally occurring plants no matter where you garden~the UK, tropical Florida, Europe, Australia, Africa, South America, India or the coldest reaches of Canada. It doesn't matter if we sometimes show the same plants, how they grow and thrive in your garden is what matters most.

I hope you join the celebration..It's always the fourth Wednesday of the month!

 

Without further ado,  here are the best and brightest of Clay and Limestone's 2011 wildflowers.

 January's Bee-Witching Flowers
Hamamelis vernalis
Hamamelis vernalis is a lovely native shrub that blooms when you have just about given up hope that winter will end and warmth will return to the world...Unless, you live in my Middle Tennessee garden and you're wondering where the heck winter has gone! 


February's Poverty Oat Grass

Danthonia spicata won't be found among the ornamental grasses offered by most nurseries.  It isn't a big sexy grass with showy inflorescence, but, it has much to offer for gardeners who love native plants.  It will grow on dry, rocky and poor soils, has attractive twisted beige winter foliage, great  wildlife value and is delightful when allowed to grow and set seed. Trust me, it's a wonderful lawn alternative for tough spots!

March's Passalong Plant~Collinsea verna
One look at those bicolored flowers and you'll know why I walk the garden looking for seedlings of Collinsea verna in late winter and early spring.  Don't you think the blue and white petals are a perfect match for a spring sky. Sigh.  It's a sweet little annual that deserves to be sown in many more gardens... 

April's Never Fail Wildflower Favorites
Tradescantia virginiana
Spiderwort, Entireleaf Western Daisy, Practically Perfect Pink Phlox pilosa, Penstamin X are just a few of the mainstays of my Spring garden. They are a part of the Rough and Tumble wildflowers that make Clay and Limestone the garden it is today.

May's The Dragons At The Bottom Of The Garden
Green Dragon (Arisaema dracontium) is a  marvelous woodland wildflower that is happiest in dappled sunlight and a moist, rich woodland soil and yet, it's tolerant of our wet winters and dry summers. If it's happy you'll have a nice colony that disappears mid-summer leaving behind the red/orange ripened seed head that topples to the ground and spills seeds everywhere. 

June's Fill Your Garden With Native Plants
You'll never be sorry if you fill your garden with plants native to your part of the gardening world. I know I'm not...My garden is a Central Basin plant community with plants native to cedar glades and the adjacent oak-hickory-red cedar forests. Anyone who has gardened near here knows we have heavy, nearly neutral clay soils that sit atop a limestone bedrock.  It's shallow and sticky wet all winter and dry as concrete all summer.  It took me awhile, but, I eventually figured out, that in order to have a garden that was beautiful and thrived, I was going to have to plant natives. Tough natives!
 
July's The Joes
I'm talking about the Joe-Pye-Weeds, aka as Eupatorium dubium, E. fistulosum, E. maculatum, E. purpureum and E dubium (aka Eutrochium). What all the Joe-Pyes have in common are great big mauve/lavender-pink flower heads that are magnets for butterflies, Bumbles and other pollinators. Can't you tell those beautiful flower heads are the perfect feeding and perching stations for nectar seeking butterflies.

August's Two Native Verbenas
I love Verbenas...and the purple flowers of Verbena hastata and Verbena/Glandularia canadensis 'Homestead Purple' are a treat to the eyes when all the Susans are in bloom!

September's Asteraceaes Rock
Here in Tennessee we have 320 different species (world wide there are over 23,000 recognized asteraceae species).  One could say that from Spring through fall they rock my garden.  In fact, I wouldn't have a garden without them.

October's Little Asters Everywhere
I fell head over heals in love with the blue and lilac flowers that were all over the yard and covered with bees and butterflies when we moved into this house 26 years ago. They so captured my heart, that I built the garden around them. These ex-asters look fantastic when they are allowed to plant themselves with abandon throughout the garden. If you can go with the flow you'll be rewarded with a blue cloud of shimmering flowers that bloom until frost...But, if you need more order, they are magnificent in mixed borders.

November's Hypercolored Hypericum Heaven
Hoky smokes gardeners! Tear out your Burning Bush, rip out your Barberry and trash your Nandinas and replace them with Hypericum frondosum!  You will love its  hyper-colored fall display, the exfoliating bark, the blue green summer foliage, and the pollinator magnet golden sunburst flowers.



My dear friends, Thank you for planting more wildflowers, thank you for taking care of the bees and all the  pollinators, thank you for tolerating pesky wildlife, and, thank you for another year of your friendship, visits, comments and joining me in celebrating wildflowers all over this great big wonderful world. You are the best and having you in my life has enriched it beyond measure.

xoxogail

Add  your Wildflower Wednesday link to Mr Linky and leave a comment!


Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Collinsia verna, A Passalong Plant for Wildflower Wednesday

I love how the little flower head is almost always tilted, giving her a pert look
I have several plants that fit in the passalong category, but, none is more treasured than Collinsia verna.

The flower reminds me of the colors of the spring sky
One look at that face with its bicolored flowers and you'll know why I walk the garden looking for seedlings in late winter and early spring.  Don't you think the blue and white petals are a perfect match for a spring sky. Sigh.  It's a sweet little flower that deserves to be sown in many more gardens.

This is what I look for starting in February

Blue-Eyed Mary is a winter annual that can be found growing in rich deciduous woodlands from New York to Wisconsin and down into Tennessee.  Like other winter annuals it germinates in the fall and overwinters as small two or three leaved seedlings that begin growing again in February.  That's why I begin my search so early.
another small flower that requires crawling on knees to really see

I've tried for years to get it established at Clay and Limestone, starting back in 2006 when I ordered seeds from the Native Garden Nursery. They arrived along with seeds for Purple Phacelia, a sweet native clematis and excellent planting instructions. But, just when I think it's here to stay, they all, but disappear.  I am not alone in my curiosity about their iffiness! Botanists researching Collinsia verna have observed dramatic fluctuations year to year in germination rates in woodland colonies. Of course they decided to set up an experiment or two in which they were able to determine that if bumbles and other pollinators weren't available that Blue-Eyed Mary will self fertilize.  Pretty cool!  If you want to know more about the study follow the link~(research study sited)

The bumbles were out and about last spring and surely visited the small colony, but, even if they missed the Marys, maybe they self-pollinated and dropped seeds that didn't germinate.  I've concluded that a long hot, dry summer followed by an even drier fall made it especially difficult for germination. The good news is that if the plants dropped seeds then, they are likely to be found dormant in the C and L soil seed bank just waiting for optimal conditions! I might have to provide a little water if Mother nature repeats last year's especially dry fall.
there are usually four seeds per flower
 I still search for seeds and plants every year. 
the transplants have  already perked up in the garden
This year I didn't have far to go.  Just when I had about given up hope of  finding any in my garden, I  got an email from Ginny, a Clay and Limestone reader, asking me if I might want a few plants from her   Middle Tennessee garden. Want them, of course I did!   She very kindly  invited me over and I dug several clumps, toured the garden, had a fantastic visit and only managed to take one blurry photo.

I sure hope the Bumbles do their job this year and that Mother nature cooperates with good fall rain
You may be asking yourself, "What kind of garden blogger forgets to take photos!"  The kind who jumps up and down with joy when a kind reader offers to share a hard to come by flower. Thank you Ginny very much.

xxoogail

More facts about Blue-Eyed Mary:

  • Collinsia verna is a plant of moist woodlands and will germinate better if soil is moist and cool in the fall.
  • It grows taller and stronger in full sunlight, but, requires consistently moist, well draining soil. Give it dappled sunlight and moist soil in a southern garden.  
  • One thing to keep in mind is that Blue Eyed Mary seeds are germinating  at exactly the same time that many gardeners are  raking leaves and cleaning up their gardens.  Gardeners who like to let leaves remain in place are going to have better success in keeping Collinsia verna in their garden.
  • The nectar and pollen of the flowers attract bumblebees and other long-tongued bees. The flower buds and seed capsules of Blue-Eyed Mary are food for the caterpillars of the butterfly Celastrina argiolus (Spring/Summer Azure). 
  • If they bloom before Bumbles are out and about they can self pollinate.
  • They're now listed as an endangered plant and have protected status in many states.
  • I pinky swear to let you all know where to find seeds. 
  • I forgot to say, that Terri Barnes of GroWild shared seeds with me, too. Terri, they did germinate, I just found tiny little seedlings. xo




Welcome to Clay and Limestone's Wildflower Wednesday celebration. WW is about sharing and celebrating wildflowers from all over this great big, beautiful world. Join us on the fourth Wednesday of each month. Remember, it doesn't matter if they are in bloom or not; and, it doesn't matter if we all share the same plants. It's all about celebrating wildflowers. Please leave a comment when you add your url to Mr Linky.



Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone." She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.