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

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Wordless Wednesday: The Autumn Dance Begins

Physostegia virginiana/False Dragonhead and Chasmanthium latifolium/River Oats,

When you let two rough and tumble wildflowers duke it out in the garden, they make beautiful music together.

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.

Thursday, September 17, 2015

I'm crazy about a good colonizing plant like Physostegia virginiana


If you like a well behaved plant that never, ever trespasses into another plant's space then forget about Physostegia virginiana, aka, False dragonhead, its colonizing ways will make you crazy.**
 the big late summer show from several seasons past
Of course, you could consider some other pretty lavender-pink late blooming flowers, but, you will miss the dramatic show and the cool bottom up bloom.
With colonizers you get free offspring and a dramatic show
 I didn't edit last year or this spring (hand surgery) and the result is a marvelous mass planting, much larger than usual. It makes me happy every time I step into the garden.  Surely this won't surprise any of you! My mostly native garden has its fair share of colonizers. I let them duke it out all summer and sit back to enjoy the fall show. It never disappoints me.
I garden for wildlife and grow False dragonhead because it's a magnet for pollinators, especially bumbles, carpenter bees and small bees and because it makes a wonderful and dramatic late summer/early fall show in the garden.

The purplish pink tubular flowers are perfect for plump little bumblebee bodies to slip inside and sup on the nectar and collect a little pollen.

 When you watch bees work these plants~ they move in and out, up and down and all around the flower head a mass planting makes sense.  When they're finished with one, they quickly move onto the next False dragonhead plant not a plant in a different genus. I've read that a planting of the same flower should be at least 4 foot wide...the key for me is "at least".  This planting is much larger~maybe 10 feet by 4 feet. This fall they'll have a whole lot of the same plant in one spot! That's what makes colonizing plants so attractive to me, they reproduce to create a nice sized planting for pollinators....and it's free plants. (I will have plants to share with others this fall.)
Bumbles are the primary pollinator~not the chubby carpenter bee~It's too large.
The entire flower head is striking, but, let's take a closer look at the individual flower. Do you suppose the dots, stripes and dots act like nectar guides to draw bees on to the perfect central lower lip landing pad? They're certainly colorful. When you get close you can see how perfectly designed the tubular flowers are for a bumblebee! It's a perfect relationship between bee and flower~ the bee gets food and the flower gets pollinated. We get to enjoy the beautiful flowers and watch the delightful critters.
A perfect flower for bumbles...ahhhh, the Pollination Syndrome at work!
Nature amazes me, every single day!
there's plenty of room for smaller bees


xoxogail

PS. In case you need a reminder, please make the pledge to never, ever, ever, ever use pesticides in your garden.

** Please don't call native plants invasive. They may be thugs, they may be aggressive, but, what they are is highly competitive plants that you must edit or decide not to plant in your gardens!

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 24, 2014

Wildflower Wednesday~2014 Roundup

Welcome to Clay and Limestone and Wildflower Wednesday!


Wildflower Wednesday is about sharing wildflowers no matter where you garden~the USA, the UK, 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 2014 wildflowers.

 Seersucker Sedge~January 2014
The blooms are an added bonus
 The best description I've read for this totally underused sedge (I find most native sedges are underused and under appreciated) is "puckered like  Christmas ribbon" and it is indeed puckered! This wonderfully textured sedge is perfect massed near a path with Christmas fern and other shade loving natives. It's semi-evergreen in my Zone7 garden.

 Shrubs in a wildflower garden~February 2014
Beginning to bloom with PPPP~the orange flower is Two-flowered Cynthia
Itea virginica is only one of several perfect shrubs for a wildflower garden. It's versatile~a stand alone plant or massed and it will grow just about anywhere except in a xeric garden. It's does best with regular water, and by best I mean covered with pollinator attracting flowers that have a sweet scent and marvelous fall color. Follow the link for more ideas for adding woodies to your garden.

False  Rue anemone~March 2014
Enemion biternatum
A member of the Buttercup family (Ranunculaceae) this cutie patootie will make a sweet colony in late winter only to disappear in late spring.  It really is happiest in a leaf mold rich soil~which is another reason to let your leaves decay in place! I see false rue anemone in woodlands in Nashville area parks and it manages to thrive and not be smothered by a thick layer of fallen leaves! I was surprised to find out that it is a pollen only plant, so the earliest visitors don't get a nectar reward for pollinating the flowers.

Happy Flower Trinity~April 2014
 If you're a cook you know that creating a delicious stock, soup, or stew often starts with basic ingredients and builds from there. The French have their mirepoix of onions, carrots and celery; the Italians have their tomato, garlic and basil; and Cajun cooking has its holy trinity of onions, peppers and celery.  Each of these  flavor bases makes the food tasty and delicious and unique to that region. Clay and Limestone has its own trio of flowering beauties~Golden Ragwort, Columbine and Downy Phlox that make the garden a colorful and tasty treat each spring.

All three are native to the Nashville Basin. The Basin is an elongated mixing bowl of land where Mother Nature has tossed cedar glade and Tennessee native plants into a unique and delicious mixture. Our tasty dish is never the same year to year, like local cooking, the proportions all depend upon the weather and what nature makes available! (from Happy Flower Trinity)

Downy woodmint~May 2014
Do you know Blephilia ciliata? It's a delightful little charmer that will brighten a shady spot in your dry woodland garden.  I met Downy Wood Mint the first summer after we moved into this house. I was wandering around in my new yard when I spotted what looked like monarda growing in the lawn. Was I ever excited. It was definitely a mint; it had square stems, opposite leaves and whorled light lavender flowers at the top of the stalk! The only thing missing was the tell tale monarda fragrance, instead, there was just the tiniest hint of a minty smell when the leaves were crushed.

I wasn't disappointed for long. Downy Wood Mint is a beautiful flowering plant and it's happier in my garden than Monarda has ever been. It is tolerant of my dry shade, isn't an aggressive grower and was naturally growing here.

Talk about right plant-right place! It really is and it's so worth giving it a try!

A Mint You and the Pollinators Will Love~June 2014
The flowers of Pycnanthemum muticum might be small, but they are mighty!

Researchers at Penn State's The Pollinator Trial found that Clustered Mountain Mint was the best plant for flowering longevity; for pollinator visitor diversity; for sheer number of insect visitors (78); and, for sheer number of bee and syrphid visitors.

That's one powerful pollinator magnet and one powerful reason for planting Clustered Mountain Mint in your garden. As a side note, it was still a bit green after two deep freezes.

In praise of a rather tall wildflower~July 2014
Silphium perfoliatum is one tall wildflower!
Some would say that this beauty is a beast of a plant and I might have agreed several years ago when it stood 9 feet tall and 3 foot wide in my little sunny Susan's Bed! I've since learned to cut it back at the same time I clip the ex-asters. I suggest you do the same, because banning this beauty from your garden because it's tall and colonizing would be a shame.

What can I say about Cup plant!
Big plant,
good looking flowers,
spreads assertively,
a rough and tumble wildflower,
tons of happy pollinators,
great wildlife value...

 It's not all about the Susans~August 2014
Rudbeckia fulgida is mainstay in the garden, but, easily over looked until mid July when Mother Nature turns on the switch and overnight the garden is a field of golden yellow. They're pushy and would take over if I let them and truth be told some years I haven't had the heart to rip out all that I should/could have! When visitors stop by and comment on the abundance of Susans in the sunny and shady garden areas, I secretly feel like the adoring mother of that unruly, but, delightful child, who's been running amok at a party. "He did what? Really! Isn't he adorable!",  I exclaim as I ignore notice that several salvia have been overrun and the verbena has disappeared. 

I hope you're not turned off by their brilliant yellow color or their lack of a sexy pedigree; the Susans rock and are especially helpful in a garden that has harsh summer sun!

 Some plants like to challenge the boundaries~September 2014
just one of the many colonizing flowers at C and L!
If you like a well behaved plant that never, ever trespasses into another plant's space then forget about Physostegia virginiana, aka, False dragonhead, it will make you crazy. Its colonizing ways don't bother me, I love rough and tumble plants that don't need special care and I find it quite easy to transplant them to other spots in the garden.

Follow the link to read about other colonizing beauties, I know there's one or two you might like.

The Charming Indian physic~October 2014
Porteranthus stipulatus in flower
I am not sure why Porteranthus stipulatus isn't in more gardens. It's really lovely and not at all difficult to grow. It is found naturally growing in rich woods on calcareous soils in a good portion of the Eastern US and can take full sun in northern states. I recommend half sun in gardens that are on the hot/dry side.

For the greatest impact, plant it along a shady path where the small flowers would be seen by anyone walking by. Be generous, plant several for the biggest impact~remember, these are small flowers and you want your garden visitors to appreciate their subtle beauty!

Paw-paw the experiment~November 2014

Everything I knew about Pawpaws I learned from Captain Kangaroo...sort of
Back in TV land in the mid-fifties the Captain invited us to sing along and mime picking up Paw-paws and putting them in a basket! I hadn't the faintest idea he was talking about a fruit, actually a giant berry, but, I remember loving the game.

That was the last I heard about Asimina triloba or Common Pawpaws until I became a native plant gardener and began learning to identify native wildflowers and trees. I began to get interested in learning more about them when a small patch was pointed out to me on a trail at Edwin Warner park. Paw paws are not only a charming looking understory tree, but, has good wildlife value for critters. It's a favorite host plant (larvae feed on the leaves and flowers) of the zebra swallowtail butterfly in the southeastern states and the only host plant for more northern locations.

A plant like this had to be in my garden~follow the link to read about the experiment...



 My dear friends, Thank you for planting more wildflowers, thank you for taking care of the bees and all the other pollinators, thank you for tolerating what others consider pesky wildlife, and thank you for another year of your friendship, visits, comments and for 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.
See you next year!
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.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Wildflower Wednesday: Some Plants Like to Challenge the Boundaries!

At Clay and Limestone we call several of them good friends.

Physostegia virginiana, aka, False dragonhead is a good friend of my garden. It's one of the rough and tumble wildflowers that makes gardening on my shallow, often dry garden soil worth the effort!

It's an enthusiastic grower, but, I decided years ago that a lovely lilac river of spiky flowers that attracts bumbles, small bees, skippers and hummers was worth having to pull out a few errant plants. (go here for more on this plant)
This mint can get a root hold in your moist, rich garden soil
Successful colonizers like False dragonhead do create work for gardeners. I've even heard several gardenblogging friends say they've banned them from their gardens! My dear friends, it's your garden plant what ever you want, but, please, don't call them invasive! They're colonizers! They're thug. They're highly competitive, but, they are not invasive species. Let's not scare off gardeners who may be considering planting more natives!
the first flowers open from the bottom
As many of you may know, my mostly native garden has its fair share of colonizers. I let them duke it out all summer and I am never disappointed by the fall show!

I do have to step into the fray occasionally to stop some of the more highly competitive plants like the  Solidagos from taking over. Goldenrods are the king of colonizing wildflowers, some more than others! Don't let that stop you from adding them to your garden, they are quite possibly the best wildflowers for critters and there are many delightful cultivars that are NOT thugs!
A Locust borer stops by for a snack
Goldenrods have great wildlife value. Native bees rely heavily on Goldenrods for both pollen and nectar to provide food for the winter brood's survival. Migrating butterflies stop by for the nectar to help them on their long flight and the seeds are needed by chickadees, finches and pine siskins during the winter. Goldenrods are also important attractors of beneficial insects like soldier beetles, hoverflies and pirate beetles.

We need those predators in our organic gardens....so plant goldenrods! Trust me, there's a perfect one for your garden!
This is the famous Frostweed in flower. It's a favorite of bumbles.
Verbesina virginica is another assertive native plant! Seedlings have germinated far from the parent plants thanks to wind and birds! That doesn't mean I would ban it from the garden, but, I am ruthless about removing seedlings of this biennial!
Buckeye butterfly visiting Verbesina
Verbesina is another good wildlife value plant. Bumbles, carpenter bees, beetles, butterflies and moths are frequent visitors. It's also the host plant for the caterpillars of the Silvery Checkerspot butterfly.

Symphyotrichum novae-angliae is another healthy colonizer, for which I am very grateful! After a long summer of Black-eyed Susan's I am ready for a big show!
New England aster with Helianthus salicifolius 'First Light'
A big lavender show is exactly what I have...This ex-aster spreads by seed, but this gardener is the one who has transplanted it to a dozen spots in my small sunny border! It's the perfect purple! It looks beautiful from across the garden and it is the perfect partner for one of my favorite late summer blooming asteraceas, Helianthus salicifolius 'First Light'.

You'lllove this flower massed in the garden
The same applies to this fantastic mist flower! If you have the space and temperament to let this plant go, please do. Conoclinium coelestinum is a plant that looks its best when allowed to naturalize. Cut it back in mid summer to keep it looking bushy and beautiful, and then let it do its beautiful thing. (go here for more on this wildflower)
Butterflies, skippers and bees are drawn to the nectar-rich flowers, while birds eat the seeds. If you want more, and once you see it massed you will, it's easily propagated from seeds or divisions. It can spread quickly if happy, but is pulled out just as easily. It grows in any soil except extremely dry. If you want easy care this is a great wildflower.
Thanks so much for stopping by to help me celebrate a few of my favorite boundary challenging native wildflowers! I've used words like colonizing, aggressive, thuggish, assertive, highly competitive, naturalizing, rhizome spread, and rough and tumble to describe them. But, don't let that scare you, colonizing plants make good garden friends.

Trust me, I'm a gardener!
xoxogail

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.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Wildflower Wednesday: False Dragonhead


Earlier this month False Dragonhead began it's charming bottom up bloom. It didn't take long for the Bumbles to arrive on the scene.
The plump bee bodies just scoot down into the tubular flowers
Mother Nature designed Physostegia virginiana, aka, False Dragonhead with bumblebees in mind. The tubular flowers are perfect for plump little bee bodies to slip right in to find the sweet spots of nectar and while pollinating the flowers.
Nectar robbing carpenter bees do not pollinate False Dragonhead flowers
Although, Bumbles are the primary pollinators of False Dragonheads, many other pollinators stop by to visit. Swallowtail Butterflies and Silver spotted skippers with long proboscis can reach far into the corolla for nectar and Carpenter bees, although, much too large to fit into the corolla, cleverly drill directly into the flower side to get at the nectar.
I was introduced to Physostegia virginiana years ago as False Dragonhead and the name has stuck with me. I have since learned that many people know it by Obedient plant, a misnomer if I've ever heard one! This plant is anything but obedient, but, I digress and will get back to that topic a little later. It's called Obedient Plant because flowers, when pushed from their normal position, are supposed to remain for a while where they have been turned. The common name dragonhead alludes to the open mouth of the corolla which was thought to resemble the fabled beasts of yore!
 the lower lip is divided into 3 lobes – the larger central one functioning as a landing pad for insects
False Dragonhead is a clump-forming North American native perennial that is found in fields, prairies, thickets, woodland openings and borders, along rivers and streams and lakesides in much of the eastern and central United States, as well as eastern Canada.  In other words, it prefers a moist spot in full sun or part shade! This member of the mint family typically grows 2-4' tall on stiff, square stems and features spikes of pinkish, tubular, lipped, snapdragon-like flowers which bloom in my garden during September and early October, just in time for late arriving pollinators which are making a mad dash to collect as much nectar and pollen for their last brood.
this striking plant needs to be massed for the best color effect...
False Dragonhead or dis-Obedient plant has a reputation for being an aggressive spreader in a garden setting. That is true, but, I don't mind its colonizing manner, it's a plant that looks better massed and what better way to get a large planting then to have it cooperate so well. I find they divide easily and there are plenty of plants for other spots in the garden or to share with friends. If you find it too aggressive you can plant it in a dryer garden spot or cut the flowers off before it goes to seed. You might even get a second flush of blooms, too.
Bumbles are the primary pollinators of Obedient plant
 Despite it's colonizing tendency, False Dragonhead is an immensely popular garden flower and several cultivars have been developed, some with variegated foliage and others are said to be less aggressive. It's really an outstanding plant that lights up the garden and looks especially gorgeous with grasses, sedges,  ex-asters, late blooming phlox, boltonia and goldenrods.
The flowers have no scent, but look smashing in a fall garden
Don't be put off by Physostegia virginiana's reputation as an aggressive plant. Yes, it's quite the colonizer in moist situations, but, it's well worth a little weeding and pulling out extra plants. It's a beauty and "a wonderful plant to add luminous rosy lavender late season color to the bronze golds and yellows of a moist meadow" or garden (source) and something that's becoming increasingly important to many of us, it's not a preferred deer food!

xoxogail

Attracts: Butterflies, Hummingbirds, Bees

Hardy in zones 3 to 7
Prefers moist, slightly acid to acid, well draining soil
Full sun to partial shade
Weed suppressing quality (it's a mint family member)
Divide in the spring, prune to reduce height and control floppiness in  early summer
Narrow, toothed leaves
2 to 4 foot tall, clumps and spreads

Hybridized for height, color and variegation (P 'Vivid', P 'Miss Manners' and P 'Variegata')

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. Wildflower Wednesday participants, 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.

Monday, September 16, 2013

September 2013 GBBD: I love the rough and tumble wildflowers of early Autumn!


It's rough and tumble wildflower time in my garden. The take care of themselves Autumn beauties are beginning to shine.
Verbesina virginica
Rough and tumble wildflowers are simple wildflowers most with no known pedigree, that bloom their hearts out and require the easiest of care.
Helenium autumnale
 Some even resent fertile, rich soil and many aren't even on a list to be hybridized, even if they should be!
unknown Solidago
Familiarity has never bred contempt when it comes to wildflowers. In fact, the more I see them, the more I appreciate their charms.
Vernonia altissima
But, they are so much more than pretty faces. 
Salvia azurea
Each one of these darlings provides more pollen and nectar return on investment than many other flowers combined.
Conoclinium coelestinum
My rough and tumble natives are landing pads of deliciousness for butterflies, bees, wasps and moths.

Symphyotrichum novae-angliae
Common plants like the Ex-asters bloom just in time for the late arriving pollinators which are making a mad dash to collect as much nectar and pollen for their last brood.

Coreopsis tripteris
Rough and tumble wildflowers are late blooming magnets for all kinds of insects, including some insects that are themselves food for spiders, birds and other insect eating critters.
Lobelia cardinalis
The provide food for migrating birds and they all make me smile.

Physostegia virginiana
 I have a special place in my heart for these wild and rough looking beauties that are often found growing in meadows, prairies and roadside ditches. I appreciate plants that haven't had their best characteristics bred out of them. They're beautiful, they're doing the job nature intended them to do, make a lot of nectar and pollen and bloom for a long time, exactly when the critters need both.

Lobelia siphilitica
They're perfect for this time of year, perfect for the resident critters and perfect for this garden.

xoxogail


It's September 15 and you know what that means! Garden bloggers all over the blogasphere are celebrating Bloom Day. You can see more gardens then you can imagine in one day if you stop by Carol's blog, May Dreams Gardens to take the linky magic carpet ride.

First flower is Ex-aster S patens

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.