gardening with native plants - container gardening

12
Contain er Gardeni ng with Native Plants Butterfly Weed (Asclepias tuberosa)

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Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

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Page 1: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

Container

Gardening with Native Plants

Butterfly Weed (Asclepias tuberosa)

Page 2: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

What exactly is a Native Plant?

• Native Plants are the species that occur naturally in a given area.

• Native Plants include ferns, grasses, water and marsh plants, herbaceous perennials, shrubs, trees and vines.

Great Blue Lobelia (Lobelia siphilitica)

• There are so many choices! They come in many colors, shapes and sizes.

Page 3: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

Why Containers?• Physical limitations– Low maintenance – Easy access

• Landscape limitations•Propagation

-You can separate some of your perennials annually and gift or plant in your landscape.

Purple Coneflower (Echinacea purpurea)

Coreopsis (lanceolata)

•Recycle-Great way to reuse many household items

Page 4: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

Containers 101• Plan your container

• Determine light and moisture requirements

• Select type of container

•Mix soil and any soil amendments needed according to VTE recommendations

Virginia Sweetspire (Itea virginica)

Page 5: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

Little Bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium)

•About• Small, non-spreading grass with blue-green

leaves that turn reddish orange in the fall• Fluffy silver seed heads are ornamental

through winter• Grows to 2’-3’ X 1’• Full Sun• Well drained, dry soil

•Benefits• Deer resistant• Drought tolerant• Attracts butterflies and birds

•Uses• Dried flowers• Cut flowers• Rock gardens• Bonsai

•Companions• Butterfly Milkweed• Pale purple coneflower• Stiff Goldenrod

Page 6: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

Woodland Phlox (Phlox paniculata)

•About• Partial to Full Shade• Average Size 6”-1.5’• Average to moist soil• Prefers Organically rich soil •Benefits • Attracts Hummingbirds and Butterflies• Beautiful Spring Flowers•Companion Plants• Virginia Bluebells • Christmas Fern• Goat’s Beard

Page 7: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

Madienhair Fern(Adiantum pedatum)

•About• Full Shade/Deep Shade• Moderate Moisture• Organically rich soil• Deciduous• Height 18”-2’ • Can be divided in Autumn or

Winter •Facts• Maidenhair fern is the source of a

pleasantly aromatic volatile oil long used as a rinse or shampoo that rendered black hair very shiny, hence the name Maidenhair.• The tough, water-repellant, shiny black stems were used by Native American peoples in basket weaving.

Page 8: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

Where Can I Purchase Native Plants Locally?

Colonial Nursery – Williamsburg

Sassafras Farm – Gloucester Cooke’s Garden – WilliamsburgLet it Grow – WilliamsburgHomestead Garden Center –

Toano 2011 Native Plant Sales

John Clayton Chapter/Native Plant Society 4-30-11Virginia Living Museum 4-16 & 4-17 & 4-23-11

Page 9: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

Where Can I See Native Plants?

• VIMS Teaching Marsh• Williamsburg Botanical Garden• Melissa’s Meadow at William & Mary• Stonehouse Elementary School• W&M Wildflower Refuge• Virginia Living Museum • New Quarter Park• Norfolk Botanical Garden• Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden• JCC Human Services (Master Gardener Project)

Page 10: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

Websites of Note• www.wildflower.org • Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center site has

excellent articles on gardening with natives, including guidelines for container gardening

•www.nps.gov/plants/pubs/chesapeake/• Web and PDF versions of handbook, Native

Plants for Wildlife Habitat and Conservation Landscaping, Chesapeake Bay Watershed, now out of print.

•www.claytonvnps.org• John Clayton Chapter, Virginia Native Plant

Society, extensive plant lists by county, excellent photo gallery.

•www.dgif.virginia.gov/habitat• Extensive how-to information for

environmental stewardship for homeowners, schools and businesses.

•www.floraofvirginia.org• Comprehensive research project publishing

2012 will describe more than 3,500 native plants with photos and illustrations.

•www.pubs.ext.vt.edu• Virginia Cooperative Extension (VA Tech &

VSU)

Black Eyed Susan (Rudbeckia heliopsidis)

Page 11: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

Great Resources for Native Plant Information

The Essential Guide Just

updated with FAQ’s and a

regional plant list.

Virginia Habitat

Partnership State

Certification

John Clayton ChapterVNPS- Local

Experts

National Wildlife Federation140,000+

registered habitats

Page 12: Gardening with Native Plants - Container Gardening

Why use Native Plants?

• Want to do less watering? Native plants are survivors and adapt to whatever is happening in their environment.

• Feel concerned about excess nitrogen causing algae blooms in the Chesapeake Bay? Natives don’t require fertilizer.

• Native Plants provide familiar sources of food and shelter for wildlife.

• On a broader ecological scale, planting native species contributes to the overall health of natural communities.