Saving the World one Garden at a Time!
What Not to Plant!
Lots of plants will
overrun your garden-FYI-plant that mint in a container, not in your garden! But here are four of particular concern. None of them is native to Canada. All of them have the potential to escape from your garden and can outcompete our native plants and
reduce biodiversity. Because of these "escapees", many native woodland plants are now
highly endangered. Imagine Ontario without Trilliums, Jack-in-the-Pulpit,
ferns, trout lilies and Mayapples! Because they don’t nourish any of our native animals, insects or birds, invasive alien plants create "dead
zones"-- places where you won't see or hear animals or insects. You can find these villains on lists titled: Most hated plants! Top Ten Most Unwanted! And the saddest thing is they are all available for sale at your local garden
centre!
Bullies of the Garden-Don't Plant These!
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Lily of the Valley |
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Magneto-you really can't contain either one... |
Plant These Instead!
Groundcovers
- Goldwell Veronica has gorgeous delicate golden tipped foliage, bright blue flowers and is attractive all season long. It forms a low tight mat and tolerates heat and drought once established. Clip or mow it after flowering to maintain an especially dense and compact habit. Attractive to butterflies and deer & rabbit resistant. Likes dry soil; divide in autumn. Height 10-15 cm 4-6 inches Spread 30-45 cm 12-18 inches
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Goldwell Veronica |
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- Amsonia 'Blue Ice' is a selected
seedling from A. tabernaemontana which is native to North America. It has blue star like flowers and the leaves turn a golden colour in fall. Plant it in full sun/part shade. It is deer resistant. Give it room to expand rather than trying
to divide. Height: 12-16
Inches Spread: 18-24
inches
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Amsonia 'Blue Ice' |
- Wild strawberry (Fragaria virginiana)
or the garden strawberry (Fragaria X ananassa) are super easy to grow and make a nice groundcover which spreads easily. Give them full
sun. Some varieties have pink flowers.
- Creeping phlox (Phlox subulata) is spring flowering, grows
in colourful mounds and comes in a variety of colours. Give it full sun and well drained soil. Easy to divide and transplant.
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Phlox subulata |
- Phlox stolonifera ‘Sherwood Purple’ with deep purple-blue flowers is ideal for any moist, shady area. It combines
beautifully with spring-flowering bulbs of all kinds; clip immediately
after blooming to encourage a dense low habit. Easily divided in early
fall.
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Phlox stolonifera under a walnut tree in May |
- Perennial geranium (Geranium maculatum) likes sun to partial shade and dry to moderate sand or clay soil. The small flowers attract butterflies and hummingbirds and are deer resistant; summer long blooming; 30-60 cm tall
- Wild Ginger (Asarum canadense) has soft green heart shaped leaves. Don't buy the one with shiny leaves as they are a Chinese species and not native; inconspicuous but beautiful maroon
flower; spreads slowly; part
shade to full shade; moist/wet soil; good for rain gardens;
drought-tolerant once established; 15-20 cm tall; deer-resistant; Native
peoples used the plant for seasoning (like a ginger substitute and for its
medicinal properties (digestive problems, coughs, colds)
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Wild Ginger |
Vines to climb
fences or walls
- Goldflame Honeysuckle (Lonicera x
heckrotti) is a native, well behaved vine, evergreen in winter with stunning tubular flowers that bloom late spring to early fall and are a hummingbird magnet. :-) Some varieties are also extremely fragrant! It will grow in full sun to partial shade and likes moist soil. Do NOT buy the Japanese honeysuckle (Lonicera japonica) which
has white and yellow flowers as it is considered invasive.
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The honeysuckle on the right is 2 years old. Photo taken mid May |
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Hummingbirds love the bright tubular flowers! |
- Climbing hydrangea (Hydrangea anomala
ssp. petiolaris) is a gorgeous climber with larger glossy foliage and large white flowers which are attractive to birds, wildlife, and bees. It is slow growing and prefers partial to full shade and moist to well-drained soil. You can easily propagate by ground layering. Simply lay a branch on the ground, cover a few of the woody parts with soil; put a rock or small brick on the covered sections; the plant will grow from the exposed shoots; water well until new plants are established.
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Climbing hydrangea on a brick wall-stunning! |
So that's it. You have a choice-plants that attract birds, butterflies and wildlife-or plants whose best option for removal is to put a For Sale sign in the front of your house.
- www.ontarioinvasiveplants.ca/
- www.ontarioinvasiveplants.ca/files/GMI_Booklet_spreads_2011_Final_web.pdf