jblue, to gardening
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natureworks, to wildflowers
@natureworks@mas.to avatar

Priceless

Wood Anemone (Anemone nemerosa)

violetmadder, (edited ) to gardening
@violetmadder@kolektiva.social avatar

Question! What are your favorite California native plants for the garden?

I am helping a community farm's native plant propagation project and I'm working on our wishlist. We're at the northeastern end of the Bay Area, so stuff from our region is best but anything from CA is worth consideration.

These are to be put out for sale to the general public, most of whom are not very familiar with the concept of native plants and are easily turned off by things that look funky or have specialized needs. Which is too bad, because funky/weird special plants are my favorites!

Edibility and fragrance are good bonuses that will add appeal. We don't want things to be stuck in pots for too long, natives suffer if they don't go in the ground and start developing deep roots pretty quick.

Is it totally the wrong time in the year to be starting any annuals from seeds? I dunno, so I'm focusing mostly on perennials for now.

I'll edit my list, in alphabetical order by scientific name:

Achillea millefolium, common yarrow is good and standard.

Aristolochia californica, the California pipevine, is totally funky but a big must since it's the only food for pipevine swallowtail caterpillars-- at the nursery where I used to work, we always had a waiting list for these because they're so slow to propagate.

Asclepias fascicularis, narrowleaf milkweed-- obvious pick for monarchs

Asclepias speciosa, showy milkweed

Camassia quamash, blue camas was a staple food for the First Nations people and the flowers are nice but I never see it in the nurseries-- I hear it's pretty easy to grow, any reason not to try for this one?

Ceanothus, I don't know why this stuff gets called California "lilac" because it doesn't smell a darn thing like lilac, very popular though

Clinopodium douglasii, yerba buena is a nice minty groundcover

Dicentra formosa, the western bleedingheart, is one of my favorite plants ever, so elegant!

Eschscholzia californica, California poppy

Epilobium canum, California fuschia

Erigeron glaucus, seaside daisy-- especially the compact Wayne Roderick form is popular

Eriogonum fasciculatum, California buckwheat

Eriogonum latifolium, seaside buckwheat

Eriogonum umbellatum, sulphur buckwheat is the bright yellow one

Erythranthe cardinalis, scarlet monkeyflower is one I see a lot

Fragaria chiloensis, beach strawberries I've been digging up from the yard and potting whole flats of em

Heuchera sanguinum, coral bells, has very attractive low foliage and tall flower spikes

Heteromeles arbutifolia, Toyon is a bit on the large side for our purposes but such an attractive and important habitat plant I want to carry a few

Iris douglasiana we've already got on hand

Lonicera ciliosa, orange trumpet honeysuckle, could be a good alternative to the invasive Japanese one

Monardella villosa, coyote mint smells very strong and has nice flowers

Penstemons, gosh there's so many which ones??

Prunella vulgaris, selfheal is a useful herb found all over the place

Ribes aureum, the golden currant, is edible and nice.

Ribes sanguinum, the red flowering currant is a popular one all over the world, so that's an obvious pick.

Salvia apiana, white sage is one I'd like more people to grow at home and stop overharvesting from the wild

Salvia clevelandii

Salvia mellifera, black sage

Salvia spathacea, hummingbird sage is quite attractive and has a fun pineapple sage flavor

Sisyrinchium bellum is charming and most nurseries with natives carry it

Symphyotrichum chilense, pacific aster we've got I've been digging it up where it jumped into the walkway and potting up a lot

Verbena lilacina is a nice fragrant one I'm fond of

Vitis californica, the native grape might be good-- although the hybrid Roger's Red is the version preferred by a lot of customers

What else, ya think?





meganL, to sustainability
@meganL@mas.to avatar

The fella bikes and walks to get this done.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VZSJKbzyMc

paulaborchardt, to art
@paulaborchardt@mastodon.world avatar

Signs of Spring in our Tucson, AZ yard: over 20 species of wildflowers have bloomed in the last month + trees like Desert Willows have been leafing out with new green leaves. Here’s my Perpetual Journal page with my art of willow leaves + a Sowthistle in bloom.

ordinoides, to conservative
@ordinoides@kolektiva.social avatar

Pics from my ramble today. I found a remarkable nature park close to home but feeling much further away. This forest is only 24 years old! it was planted in 2000 in a bold bit of ecological restoration on 60 acres of degraded land next to the old dump. You can get here by bike or foot but but not car so it was very quiet. In an hour I saw only 5 humans and 4 dogs.
I wish they had taken better care against invasive plants though, there was a lot of English ivy and Himalayan blackberry.
#ecology #rewilding #NativePlants #SalemOregon #WillametteValley #GoByBike

A picture of a gravel trail going into a young forest of cottonwood trees, early spring, just starting to leaf out. There is a trash can and "clean up after your dog" sign in the foreground.
A sign with pictures of people planting trees in an open field. It reads: "On April 15th 2000, hundreds of volunteers planted more than 45,000 trees and shrubs. A total of 60 acres was restored to native vegetation."

msquebanh, to nature
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar
msquebanh,
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

are blooming everywhere now. Some folks call them, .

Learn how to harvest & use this that many folks see as just a weed:
https://www.ruralsprout.com/purple-dead-nettle

msquebanh, (edited ) to nature
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar
msquebanh, (edited )
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar
natureworks, to wildlife
@natureworks@mas.to avatar

Early edible perennial, stuffed full of goodness. What's not to love?

sarahc, to oregon
@sarahc@mas.to avatar

The plant in the first photo may not look like much, but it's very special. It's tall western penstemon (Penstemon hesperius), which only grows in about a half dozen locations in the Portland, #Oregon/Vancouver, #^Washington area -- and nowhere else in the world. This pestemon was thought to have gone extinct in the late 20th century, but it's turned out to be surprisingly tough. Even so, P hesperius is on the federal endangered species list.

#botany #NativePlants #EndangeredSpecies

1/n

jblue, to hiking
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar
natureworks, to wildflowers
@natureworks@mas.to avatar

Bank of Wild Garlic (Allium ursinum) in Moylegrove, Pembrokeshire UK

natureworks, to wildflowers
@natureworks@mas.to avatar

Greater Stitchwort (Stellaria holostea)

natureworks, to wildflowers
@natureworks@mas.to avatar
natureworks, to random
@natureworks@mas.to avatar

My latest jam is

Think ancient, multi-functional, productive ecosystem. A wood. And a meadow. Like a .

The quote & paper that sparked my fire:
“Neither in any other community of Western Europe, nor anywhere in the tropics, does the number of vascular plant species within a few square meters reach the numbers counted on the Estonian wooded meadows.”

https://grwd.cc/paper-when-culture-supports-biodiversity

Photo of Laelatu wooded meadow in Estonia Dr Oldekop on Wikimedia Commons

dandelion, to random
@dandelion@dresden.network avatar

The first native herald of spring - Virginia Springbeauty (Claytonia virginica).

Another cluster of buds and one small white open flower against a dark first floor

natureworks, to wildflowers
@natureworks@mas.to avatar
visionsofnapa, to california
@visionsofnapa@sfba.social avatar

An amazingly Ceanothus bush blooming in Napa Oxbow common. The flowers are deep blue, almost purple.

visionsofnapa,
@visionsofnapa@sfba.social avatar

Here’s a close-up of the Ceanothus showing its teeny tiny green leaves.

msquebanh, to Bloomscrolling
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar
msquebanh, to nature
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar
kellyromanych, to random
@kellyromanych@mastodon.social avatar

Grateful for a calm morning after yesterday's thunderstorm.

nshivar, to Plants
@nshivar@mastodon.online avatar

Love how University extension websites are creating "if you like this Home Depot plant, you may like this plant that is native to your region" guides. Extremely useful service.

jblue, to hiking
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

Went yesterday

Can anyone identify this pine tree?

Aralia spinosa, devil’s walking stick: leaf buds and mature leaves are edible. Buds taste like broccoli/brussel sprouts (w/o bitterness), leaves taste like salad green + asafoetida. Dried berries give me slight allergic reaction but ppl use it as a pepper substitute.

Vaccinium corymbosum, high bush blueberry

Acer rubrum, red maple

@plants

A downward-facing close-up of a young devils walkingstick with green and dark red leaves sprouting out of the top of a stem that looks like Kermit the frog projecting multiple spiking forked tongues out its wide gaping mouth. It’s a little disturbing. Faded in the background in the lower part of the pic you can see the thorns on the stem. Faded further is green and brown of the ground on the trail.
Branch with blooming white bell-shaped flowers and light pea-green leaves against a blurred natural background. These are wild blueberries, not cultivated ones so the flowers are smaller and less profuse. The light is shining directly on the flowers so they glow white.
Light is casting on a cluster of red maple seed pods so that they glow with color. The seed pods have long fire-engine red stems and the seed pods are so richly colored they look like beta fish tails. Towards the center of the tail where the seeds are stored, they are bright chartreuse and blush pink and red. The end of the tail fins are deeply veined orange and red. One of the seed pods in front has a tiny white caterpillar that is easily overlooked. The stems are hanging off a branch on the top right and you can see a light green leaf bud facing upwards from where the stems emerge. The background is faded forest. Mostly brown and some green leaves and stems.

alexskunz, to Bloomscrolling
@alexskunz@mas.to avatar

Today on the : five recent photos of the irresistible annual bloom of Ceanothus tomentosus (Woolly Leaf Ceanothus, sometimes also called California Lilac), which colors the hillsides blue with its beautiful little flower clusters.

https://www.alex-kunz.com/back-in-blue/

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