Sunday, April 28, 2024

Native Plant Gardening is not One & Done

 

The places where we live are mostly artificial constructs. Those of us in urban/suburban areas are living in an environment of our own making. Someone cleared the land enough to build a house on it and the plants that we’ve chosen to invite into this space were—for the most part—our choices. I hope you’ve chosen native plants, as much as 70% if you can, either in what you planted or what you chose to keep. But you’re not done; you’re never done; just like with a garden that uses non-native plants, things change.

As many of you have done this spring, I spent time this week editing the garden. Sediment on the driveway had convinced the mountain mint (Pycnanthemum) that it had about 8-10 more inches of room so I reclaimed that space and potted up the extra plants. A tall annual grass had squeezed into all the extra spaces in the front bed (nature abhors a vacuum?) and I easily pulled much of it out so that what I really wanted to grow would have more room. 

I continue to monitor one 2x2 foot area of the lawn for a small new weed that appeared in 2022; these last two years I’ve been able to find and pull it before it blooms. I hope it will run out of energy eventually. I continue to monitor and pull false hawkweed (Youngia japonica) and the ever-present stiltgrass (Microstegium vimineum), mostly in the shady areas. And while I love the bright blooms of the native biennial butterweed (Packera glabella), I usually cut off the spent flower heads so that it is not the only thing in my yard every spring.

Butterweed seeks total domination!

I’ve written before about having to occasionally remove things – like trees that have grown so large that they shade out the space at the expense of a more diverse environment. The area where the tree was removed is now a large patch of mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum), which thankfully the deer usually avoid.

Mayapple around the tree stump

Critters are a source of delight but also frustration when they destroy plants. While deer have done damage (both eating things and causing damage from antler rub), moles and voles have too. A pair of lilies that I featured in 2022—after writing that they survived moles—were destroyed the very next year by the same critters. A friend gifted me more of them; I will be planting them in wire cages in the ground!

So enjoy your gardens and your native plants and know that—native or not—our gardens are always a work in progress for a variety of reasons. Working in the wildlife-friendly garden is always interesting and helps to bring us close to many of the small reasons we do it.



Sunday, April 21, 2024

April 2024 Moment in Nature

A nest building attempt in 2017

Having birds that feel confident to nest in your yard is a great feeling: they feel safe and they feel like there is food enough to raise their babies. This month I realized that a pair of brown-headed nuthatches had built a nest is one of the dead pine snags that I have left just for them.














This snag is not far from the driveway, and I hear their calls when I'm working in the area or just going to the mailbox.



I'm excited to be able to contribute to the population of brown-headed nuthatches; it is a bird that needs pine snags in our woodlands. This discovery is my #momentinnature for this month. 

Sunday, April 14, 2024

Landscape Spotlight: Roundabouts

 

Roundabouts are on the rise – sometimes I like to count how many roundabouts I have to go through to get where I’m going: four of them is not uncommon these days! Some of them are large and some are small, but they all have some plants in the middle and I’m always interested to see what was chosen for that spot. Since I live adjacent to the city of Milton, theirs get a lot of my attention and they have mostly chosen a good selection of native plants for them.

Roundabout with hawthorn and Yaupon holly

A triple row of Yaupon holly (Ilex vomitoria)

Hawthorn (Crataegus viridis)

These are photos from two of their recent installations. The first one I’m showing is a smaller version of another one that features the same plants and which has done well. The center has hawthorns (most likely Crataegus viridis ‘Winter King’) which has gorgeous white spring flowers and abundant red fruits in the fall. These are handsome trees with a very pleasing shape. Around the trees is a solid ring of evergreen native shrubs that have been used for years: Ilex vomitoria ‘Nana’ (or similar dwarf). Once I got up close, I could see that the shrubs were in 3 concentric rings.

Blooming Viburnum with Fothergilla behind

Viburnum obovatum dwarf cultivar

The second roundabout is new and was completed last year; it features a mix of native and non-native plants. The center has 3 large trees that have not yet leafed out but hopefully they are native oaks. What caught my attention was an outer half-ring of a dwarf native viburnum: Viburnum obovatum ‘Mrs Schiller’s Delight’ (or other dwarf cultivar, there are several). Behind that is a half-ring of a native Fothergilla. The rest of the circle appeared to be non-native hydrangea and perhaps a dwarf gardenia. Native grasses – perhaps little bluestem and muhly – were also part of the design.

Most of these roundabouts are cared for (weeds removed, dead plants swapped out) and generally they are attractive accents to the landscape. I’m glad to see native plants be part of their selections and hopefully they catch the attention of folks looking for landscape ideas.

This is a post in an occasional series on good designed uses for native plants. You can find my previous posts in this series using this search criteria.

Sunday, April 7, 2024

Where Do Butterflies Go in the Winter?

 

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail on crabapple

Are you seeing butterflies now? Where were they over the winter? Why some and not others? I was inspired to research and write this post because this week I found two caterpillars of the Red-spotted Purple butterfly (Limenitis arthemis) on a potted black cherry tree (Prunus serotina) that lives on my driveway (for lack of finding a better home). This butterfly species can overwinter two ways: in a chrysalis or as a partially grown caterpillar that constructs a tightly shaped leaf tube called hibernacula in which to spend the winter.

Red-spotted Purple on black cherry this week

How do most Georgia butterflies overwinter? It varies by species and they can overwinter as adults (migratory behavior), as pupae (in a chrysalis), as larvae (caterpillar), or as eggs. 

I looked up some of the more common ones that I see to compare their different strategies that evolution has worked out for them. For those of you who have heard the message about “leaving the leaves,” take note of how many of these beauties overwinter in leaves as pupae, larvae, or eggs.

Swallowtails are some of our earliest butterflies - the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail, our state butterfly - is one the first that I see each year. They (and other swallowtails like Spicebush, Zebra, Eastern Black, Pipevine) overwinter as a chrysalis right in our landscapes (be careful about cleaning up!) so they are ready to emerge when flowers and host plants are available to them.

Monarch – This well-known butterfly famously migrates south and overwinters as an adult in reproductive diapause (so it lives longer and doesn't try to breed during that time).

Gulf Fritillary – This one flies south, overwinters as adult in warmer areas; I've linked my earlier blog about finding thousands of these in Florida.

Cloudless Sulphur (Phoebis sennae) – This pale yellow butterfly also flies south, overwintering as an adult in warmer areas; I usually don't see it again until the summer red flowers are blooming.

Cloudless Sulphur
Pearl Crescent













Pearl Crescent (Phyciodes tharos) – The partially grown caterpillars stop eating (larvae) and find shelter in a curled leaf.  There they remain in diapause until spring, when eating resumes.

American Lady (Vanessa virginiensis) – I didn't realize these went south until I researched it. They overwinter as an adult in warmer areas.

Common Buckeye (Junonia coenia)  – Another surprise for me: they overwinter as an adult in warmer areas.

Spring and Summer Azures (Celastrina) – Both of these overwinter in our landscape in chrysalis (pupae) form.

Mourning cloak – Adults spend winter months in hiding spots, sheltered from the elements.  They emerge on warm days to search for energy sources that include sap flows or carrion.

Question Mark – These overwinter as adult butterflies and often fly in early spring on warm days. Their underwing resembles a dried leaf, giving them extra camouflage.

Question Mark

American Snout

American Snout – Late fall adults enter diapause during winter months and resume activity the following spring, as early as mid-February

Hairstreaks – In general, these species overwinter as eggs or larvae in leaf litter.

Silver-spotted Skipper

Silver-spotted Skipper (Epargyreus clarus) – This large skipper overwinters as chrysalis (pupae).

Fiery Skipper – These little ones go south for the winter but other skippers have different behaviors.

If you love butterflies and want to have them in your yard, be sure to plant host plants for them. This brochure is a great resource in Georgia.

The Red-spotted Purple