In today's episode, Fall in Love with Native Plants, we go over why not to neglect the three season garden and the many native perennials and grasses you can incorporate for fall interest.
We've dug into our archives and given new life to an old episode. Come for a refresh on some great native fall-blooming plants in case you need some ideas for some last-ditch fall projects.
Host Stephanie Barelman
Stephanie Barelman is the founder of the Bellevue Native Plant Society, a midwest motivational speaker surrounding the native plants dialog, and host of the Plant Native Nebraska Podcast.
Episode Sponsors
Today's episode is sponsored by:
Lauritzen Gardens
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I've gleaned a lot of today's fun insect info from Heather Holm's book Pollinators of Native Plants: https://amzn.to/3ZyEK85
Go find her podcast episode from last October for more seasonally-relevant info!
Fall Plant Families
New England aster
Also:
heath aster
Looks like a snowy blanket in bloom ('snow flurry') or if using the straight native species, like snow covered branches reaching up
Growth habit from 1 foot to 3 feet, two completely different habits depending on if you use 'snow flurry cultivar' or the straight native species
Other utility: long lived aster, suited for dry, tough areas
silky aster
Looks very delicate, grows around things, very wispy and ethereal
Growth habit up to 1 foot and a half
heartleaf aster
Looks heart shaped leaves periwinkle flowers
Growth habit up to 3 feet, likes to show up everywhere and you will let it
smooth blue aster
Looks bluish purple with blue green leaves
Growth habit shrubby but open
Late season nectar forage YES!
Host plant status crescent butterflies
sky blue aster
Looks another pale purple aster, very similar to smooth aster
Growth habit up to 3 feet
aromatic aster
True to its name another pale purple aster up to 2 feet, popular one the rabbits don’t seem to eat.
tall boneset
Looks tall with tight clustered fireworks of white, stout, doesn’t need much support, dense
Growth habit up to 5 feet
Maximilian sunflower
Also:
sawtooth sunflower
Looks tall majestic yellow sunflowers with large green leaves
Growth habit colony forming up to about 6 feet
We saw a great example of this at Little Salt Fork Marsh Preserve near Lincoln in Raymond, NE. Indian grass, little bluestem, and sawtooth sunflower: heaven.
western sunflower
Looks similar to false sunflower, delicate yellow daisy shaped blooms
Growth habit up to 3 feet
Blooms from July to September
Jerusalem artichoke
Native sunflower with edible tubers, aggressive but we talk about its usefulness and how to grow it in our native edible plant series, specifically our episode on vegetables, greens, and alliums
wild petunia
common ironweed
stiff goldenrod
zig zag goldenrod
Also:
canada goldenrod
Looks like goldenrod!
Growth habit stout goldenrod, aggressive spreader perfect for wild spaces or in an area you can let it grow into a nice patch
Late season nectar forage YES!
Can be a good rain garden addition, especially with obedient plant and swamp milkweed
Missouri goldenrod
Looks like goldenrod!
Growth habit 3 feet or so, a little floppy
Early blooming!
showy goldenrod
Looks a nice gorgeous specimen true to its name, not too bad on flopping
Growth habit up to 5 feet
Late season nectar forage YES!
Also: look into goldenrod if you're interested in native plant dyes
Disclaimer: I've introduced you to a rabbit hole...
Helenium autumnale
cheerful yellow flowers
looks great in a rain garden
butterfly milkweed
Also:
whorled milkweed
Looks delicate white orchid shaped flowers, leaves turn yellow in fall
Growth habit an opportunist, will cheerfully spread itself around your other plants but only grows to about a foot tall
Other utility wasps dig it
false sunflower
Verbena stricta
Verbena hastata
Rattlesnake master
pitcher sage
Looks pale bluish purple
Growth habit: tall so place accordingly, this thing is gonna flop you really got to place other tall and or shrubby stuff around it
Host plant status hermit sphinx moth
Other utility drought tolerant, aromatic, lovely paired with yellow, a bee favorite
2. Virginia mountain mint
3. wild bergamot
4. spotted bee balm
purple love grass
Looks like beautiful purple smoke, or golden smoke
Growth habit short, wispy
Other utility great for hellstrips or other stubborn dry areas
prairie dropseed
Looks big friendly green tuft of grass
Growth habit bunch forming, 2-3 feet
Other utility birds like eating the seeds, good source of fall color as cold sets in
Versatile grass that will grow in a variety of areas
side oats grama
Looks like rolled oats on a blade of grass, teeny tiny red flowers, see if you can spot them
Growth habit open up to 2 or so feet tall
Host plant status larval host for skippers
Other utility another great grass for dry spaces
blue grama
Up to 2 foot range
Easy to start from seed
Great for erosion
little bluestem
Looks kaleidoscope of blues and purples and reds and copper tones
Growth habit 3 feet and sometimes a scowtch taller if its really happy
Host plant status larval host for skippers
Other utility birds will eat the seeds, our official state grass
big bluestem
Looks amazing purplish red tips, looks like heaven paired with Indian grass
Growth habit tall these babies get up to about 8 feet tall
Other utility a very important part of tallgrass prairie ecosystems
switchgrass
4 to 5 foot range
Looks amazing with little bluestem and other wildflowers
Has trendy named cultivars
indian grass
Looks bronze and gold colored seedheads, majestic en masse
Growth habit tall 6 feet or more
Other utility: food for birds
In conclusion
Be open-minded, fall exists outside of exotic chrysanthemums and ornamental kale. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise!
What makes a plant native?
http://bonap.net/fieldmaps Biota of North America North American Plant Atlas database-select Nebraska
https://bellevuenativeplants.org Bellevue Native Plant Society
native (wild type) vs. nativar/native cultivar (cultivated by humans for desirable characteristics)
On the Web
BONAP aforementioned
BNPS aforementioned
http://www.facebook.com/groups/bellevuenativeplantsociety- BNPS on Facebook
Books & Authors
Rick Darke- The Living Landscape
Douglas Tallamy- Professor and Chair of the Department of Wildlife Ecology and Entomology at the University of Delaware, author of The Living Landscape, Nature's Best Hope, naturalist, and curator of "Homegrown National Park".
Enrique Salmon- Iwigara
Daniel Moerman -Native American Ethnobotany
Heather Holm- https://www.pollinatorsnativeplants.com
Native Plants of the Midwest
Planting in a Post-Wild World
Jon Farrar's Field Guide to Wildflowers of Nebraska
Other Local Organizations
Listen, rate, and subscribe!
Get some merch! https://plant-native-nebraska.myspreadshop.com/
Find us on Facebook
Visit our homepage https://plant-native-nebraska.captivate.fm
Give us a review...