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Boltonia ‘Snowbank’ (Boltonia asteroides): 'Snowbank' is an introduction of the New England Wild Flower Society. 3-4’ x 2-4’ bold aster-like strongstemmed perennial. Noted for compact growth, doesn’t need staking. Native to wet prairies, marshes, meadows, from New Jersey south. Masses of ¾” yellow-centered pure-white flowers cover the plant on long billowing branched panicles, in August and September. 5” narrow gray green leaves on branched stems. Full sun to part shade. Ordinary, wet to moderately dry well-drained soil. Rugged and adaptable. Can withstand drought. Back of the border (3+ is best), naturalized in meadows, cottage gardens, wild gardens. Perfect companion for other fall flowers Attracts butterflies. Photos 5, 7 Missouri Botanic PlantFinder mobot.org/gardeninghelp/plantfinder All other photos: North Central Conservation District Calico Penstemon (Penstemon calycosus) 1-3’, upright, mostly unbranched. CT native, found in moist to dry woods, rocky slopes, moist meadows within woodlands Panicles of 1” pale pink-lavender snapdragon-like flowers, with whitish inner surface, spring through early summer, atop 3-4’ central stalks. 5” lance-shape fine-toothed shiny leaves, smaller as ascending stems. Flowering stems replaced by low leaves at base that persist to spring. Full to part sun. Moist to somewhat dry loamy soil. The plant is taprooted. Use in borders, wildflower gardens, for naturalizing. Attracts long-tongued bees, including Honeybees, Bumblebees, Mason Bees. Sphinx Moths and Hummingbirds also visit. Photos 1, 2, 4 Mount Cuba Center mtcubacenter.org/plant-finder/details/penstemon-calycosus/ Photos Steve Baskauf http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu Canadian Burnet (Sanguisorba canadensis) 2-5’ x 2’ vigorous graceful clump. CT native, found in low and wet areas along rivers, banks, peaty bogs, swamps, wet meadows, thickets, sedge meadows, fens. 4-7”-long graceful swaying dense bottlebrush candles of small white JuneOctober flowers, on towering branched stems, above foliage. Opens upwards from base. Wide-spreading 1.5’ compound leaves with 715 2” bright toothed oblong leaflets, mostly on lower half of plant. Leaves turn reddishyellow in fall, in good contrast with white flowers. Sun to part sun. Wet to moist soil. Adaptable. Use in borders, wildflower gardens. Pollen and nectar attract various kinds of bees. Streamside buffers. Photo 1 State of Maine Dept. of Conservation Maine Natural Areas Program maine.gov/doc/nrimc/mnap/ features/sancan.htm Photos 2, 5 Jesse Saylor Michigan State University saylorplants.com Photo 4 Ryan P. O'Connor Michigan State University MI Natural Features Inventory Mnfi.anr.mus.edu/explorer/ images.cfm?id=14810 Photos 3, 6, 7 Jennifer S. Durkin, Botanist Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie, US Forest Service fs.fed.us/wildflowers/plantof-the-week/sanguisorba_ canadensis.shtml Coreopsis ‘Route 66’ (Coreopsis verticillata) 24-28” upright mounds with dense fine branches. Native PA south, found in dry woods and clearings along coastal plains. Profuse 1-2” daisy-like bright yellow flowers with deep red center rings spreading irregularly toward tips of rays, July-fall. The red increases as the weather cools, becoming dominant in autumn. One of the last bloomers in the fall, lasting into November. Cut back strongly after first big flush of flowers for best shape and re-bloom in autumn. Very fine threadlike green leaves. Sun to part sun. Average, moist to dry, well-drained soil. Long-lived and drought tolerant once established. Deer resistant. Easily grown. Use in borders, in edging, in cottage gardens. Also effective in naturalized areas, wild gardens. Attracts hummingbirds and butterflies Photo 1 Cody Parmer University of Georgia, Athens, GA discoverlife.org/mp/20p?see=I_EHCP3853&res=640 Photos 2, 5 North Central Conservation District Photo 3 Mount Cuba Center mtcubacenter.org/plant-trials/detail/coreopsis-route-66/ Photo 4 Missouri Botanic PlantFinder www.mobot.org/gardeninghelp/plantfinder Creeping Phlox ‘Pink Ridge’ (Phlox stolonifera) 6-10” low mats of semi-evergreen foliage, creep 6’ , or indefinitely. Can form large colonies in the wild. Moderately fast spreader. Native to moist mountain woods and stream banks; PA south Loose clusters of sweet-scented bright pink flowers with five rounded overlapping petals, float on thin 8” stems, early/mid-spring. rise above mats on thin 8” upright stems. Paddle shaped 1-2” leaves. Part sun to shady. Moist to medium, well-drained humusy soils. During the springtime cleanup, be careful not to rake up this plant, as its hold in the ground is shallow. When the soil is workable, sections of the plant can be transplanted to bare patches, provided the transplants are watered in dry periods. Undemanding. Attractive woodland ground cover, useful for shade gardens, fronts of borders, rock gardens, naturalized areas, and combined with spring bulbs. Attracts butterflies. Photos: North Central Conservation District Doll’s Eyes ‘Misty Blue’ Actaea pachypoda (also known as White Baneberry) 2-3' handsome clumps. CT native, found in moist rich woods, wooded slopes and seeps, high quality woods where original ground flora intact. 2-6” foamy spires of white flowers, MayJune, with a musky sweet perfume. Large, finely cut, soft bluish-green leaves, with 4” toothed oval leaflets, attractive through the growing season. Elongated loose clusters of exceptionally showy pea-sized shiny bright chalky-white round fruit with distinctive purplish black eye spot (doll’s eyes) on contrasting thick bright-red stems, above foliage, late summer until frost. Part shade to shade, prefers well-drained moist rich humusy loamy soil. Long-lived, carefree, and improves over the years. Likes a light mulch of rich leaf mold in winter. In damp summers foliage can blacken and die prematurely, but no permanent harm to plants. If spread desired, pick berries and immediately plant into the ground as soon as ripened. Use in woodland gardens, massed, shady borders, for naturalizing. Attracts bees. Birds eat the berries to a limited extent, though mammals seem to ignore the fruit. The plant, especially the berries, are toxic if eaten in large quantities. Photo 1 Federal Government; commons.wiki Media.org/wiki/File:Actaea_pachypoda0.jpg Photo 2 Mount Cuba Center; mtcubacenter. org/plant-finder/ details/actaea-pachypoda/ Photo 3 Margery Melgaard; Univ. of Wisconsin-Stevens Point;wisplants.uwsp.edu Photo 4 Friends of the Eloise Butler Wildflower Garden; friendsofelouisebutler.org Photo 5 Dan Busemeyer, IL Natural History Survey; inhs.illinois.edu/animals_plants Photo 6 David G. Smith, Delaware Wildflowers; delawarewildflowers.org Photo 7 Janet Novak, CT Botanical Society www.ct-botanical-society.org Photo 8 Robert E. Wright en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Actaeapachypoda.jpg Golden Alexander (Zizia aurea) 1-3’, upright, branched perennial, often seeding into small colonies. CT native, found in sunny moist meadows, woods edge and openings, thickets, roadsides. Attractive tiny bright-yellow flowers in 2-3” flat-topped umbels like Queen Anne’s Lace, May-June. Green fruit capsules turn purple in summer. Compound leaves divided in three, with triangular serrate shiny leaflets. Sun to light shade; moist to wet soils, tolerates summer drought. Rugged, easy plants. Use in wildflower gardens, meadows, open woodlands, rain gardens, for cut flowers, and flowers in salads. Provides accessible nectar to many beneficial insects with short mouthparts. Attracts bees. Attracts butterflies, larval host for black swallowtails. Photo 1 Delaware Wildflowers Delawarewildflowers.org/plant. php?id=2174 Photos 2, 5 Steve C. Garske Univ. of Wisconsin- Stevens Point wisplants.uwsp.edu/scripts/ detail.asp?SpCode=ZIZAUR Photo 3 The Battery Plant Database thebattery.org/plants/plantview. Php?id=188 Photo 4 Merel R. Black Univ. of Wisconsin- Stevens Point wisplants.uwsp.edu/scripts/ detail.asp?SpCode=ZIZAUR Photo 6 Missouri Botanical Garden PlantFinder mobot.org/gardeninghelp/ plantfind Goldenrod ‘Fireworks’ (Solidago rugosa) 2½-3’ upright perennial, with long arching stems. CT native, found in fields, meadows, prairies. Multitudes of brilliant yellow flowers on long thin plume-like panicles, resemble fireworks, August-October. Thin lance-shaped dark leaves. Sun to part sun; dry to moist soils, tolerates floods, drought. Much less invasive than species: can spread a little by rhizome, but is easy to pull; may self-seed, which you can deadhead to prevent, or leave seed heads for the birds. Goldenrods do not cause hayfever - that’s ragweed. Use in moist meadows, borders, naturalized areas, rain gardens, for cut flowers. Prized in Europe for the back of flower borders. Combines well with daisies and asters, in late summer/early fall. Attracts bees, which rely on the pollen and nectar to build up their winter stores. Attracts 115+ butterflies and moths, like monarchs, skippers. If faded flowers left to seed, will be enjoyed by a large variety of birds, including finches, juncos, and indigo bunting. Birds also feed on insects enjoying flowers. Stream buffers. Photos 1, 3, 5 MO Botanicl. Garden PlantFinder mobot.org/gardeninghelp/plant finder Photo 2 Mount Cuba Center mtcubacenter.org/plant-finder/ details/solidago-rugosafireworks Photos 4, 6, 7, 8 No. Central Conservation District Hair-awn Muhly Grass (Muhlenbergia capillaris) 2-3’ tuft of leaf blades, in flower the plant reaches 5’. Primarily a Southeast U.S. species, but history of some native presence in CT and MA, primarily in dry, rocky, openings on the trap rock. Elsewhere found in upland savannahs, dry rocky open woods, rocky slopes and ledges. Glossy, wiry, dark leaves form an attractive basal clump, turning copper in the fall. Stiff stalks hold magnificent large gossamer haze of 3’ feathery tassels with tiny flowers, first green, then white, then a superb rosered as seeds mature in fall, through October, a ruby glow in the sun; attractive smoky gray in winter. Sun, tolerating some shade; average to moist well-drained soil, prefers fairly fertile soil but tolerates poor soil. Tolerates drought. Adaptable. Takes a few seasons to reach full size. Plant once air and soil have warmed, and water regularly during first month, especially. Use as specimen, in drifts, meadows, wildflower areas, borders, foundations, cottage gardens, for cut and dried flowers, in areas of poor soil. Attracts ladybugs. Provides wildlife cover. Deer seem to leave it alone. Photo 1 Graham Wyatt discoverlife.org/mp/20q? search=Muhlenbergia+ capillaris Photos 2, 4 The Battery Conservancy Thebattery.org/plants/plant View.php?id=116 Photo 3 Bobby Hattaway discoverlife.org/mp/20q? search=Muhlenbergia+ capillaris Photos 5, 6 Missouri Botanical Garden PlantFinder mobot.org.gardeninghelp/ plantfinder Photo 7 Contributors to The State Botanical Garden of Georgia discoverlife.org/mp/20q? search=Muhlenbergia+ capillaris Helen’s Flower ‘Ruby Tuesday’ (Helenium autumnale) 18-24” compact upright clumps, outwardly spreading habit; stout stems branch near the top. New England native. Found in thickets, wet meadows, swamps, along streams, ponds. Abundant 2” daisy-like flowers with fluted widely spaced wedge-shaped deep ruby-red to copper-red rays, from a prominent red-mahogany center dome with surrounding saffron-colored stamens, July-September. Narrow lance-shaped dark green 6" leaves. Full sun. Medium to wet soil, prefers rich, moist soils. Divide clumps every 3-4 years to maintain vigor. Easy to grow. Use in borders, cottage gardens, cutting gardens, moist soils along bodies of water. Much loved by longtongued bees, honey bees, bumblebees, miner bees. Attracts butterflies. Photos 1, 2 Alfred Osterloh Commons.hortipedia.com/wiki/File: Helenium_RUBY_TUESDAY_flowers_photo_file_742KB.jpg Photos 3, 4, 5 North Central Conservation District