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Forbs of the Southern Prairie Garden Part 1

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By M Fitzgerald (MitchF)
August 5, 2007
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Views: 1,581

Much of the southern United States is catching on to the native plant movement. The hardest thing for the southern gardener is finding those plants that both look good in our area and will stand up to the heat. These plants can be added to a cottage look garden, they can be mixed into borders, or they can be used to build a full prairie garden.

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This is a good starting list for those who are looking for native plants for southern gardens. This is not a list of every native plant out there by far – but this is a list of many plants that just look stunning in a southern garden. Any of these plants could be used in almost any gardening program. They will need less water than many of the plants most garden centers try to get us to buy. They will stand up to our long summers and they will love our shorter winters. These are prize winning plants for our southern gardens that we only have to give minimal care to.

 

The most important plants to start the prairie garden are the grasses. There are three grasses that I use in my gardens that tend to look good and are nice team players. They are Andropogon geradii, Big Bluestem; Andropogon scoparius, Little Bluestem; and Sorghastrum nutans, Indian Grass. Big Bluestem is a stunning grass if you have the space to give it room to grow. It grows to 6 feet tall and gains a wonderful orange color in fall. Little Bluestem is the plant for the smaller garden, gaining a height of 3 feet and a wonderful red color in the fall. Indian Grass is the dominant species of most of the area. This grass is a great silver blue color during the year and grows to 6 feet.

 

The flowering plants of the prairie are a more complicated matter. In the section below, most of the major plants can be used in the prairie garden and most of these plants can be used in any landscape garden as well.

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Allium stellatum, Wild Onion is a wonderful plant that will grow in and out of other plants in your garden. The 24 inch stalks are crowned with wonderful pink flowers in the summer. The leaves, roots, and flowers are all edible and wonderful to use in salads or Tex-mex cuisine.

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Asclepias tuberosa, Butterflyweed is the classic native butterfly weed that is well known in southern areas of the United States. The milkweed grows to about 36 inches tall and is covered with bright orange flowers. This is a classic butterfly plant but it is also a thrill to your local bees.

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Asclepias viridis, Green Milkweed is just coming into its own in the garden. Much like its cousin Butterflyweed, Green Milkweed is a green version with large bell shaped flowers. It grows to 18 inches tall and the flower clusters get bigger year after year. This is a great uncommon flower for the prairie garden that should be used more often.

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Aster oblongifolius, Fall Aster is a stunning plant. The stiff stems are easy to propagate via cuttings. They love to grow and it is rather easy to move some of the roots to spread to other areas. The purple flowers are a show stopper when in bloom – they cover the plants building a wonderful purple cloud.

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Baptisia australis, Blue Baptisia is a very popular garden flower but few people know this wonderful flower is also a native. This plant grows to 4 feet high and has a good spread making it perfect for borders and prairie type garden situations. Their blue flowers are stunning when in bloom and will steal the show.

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Baptisia leucantha, White False Indigo is the cream colored version of the Baptisia australis. Growing to 4 feet and the same spread, this flower blooms in the heat of the summer when other flowers are clocking out. The cool cream color is perfect for the summer garden.

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Cucurbita foetidissima, Buffalo Gourd is a large vine with bright cheery flowers. This vine is hard to control in anything but a prairie garden, but well worth the effort if you have the space. The gourds are about the size of baseballs and useful in many Native American crafts.

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Echinacea purpurea, Purple Coneflower is a classic native plant being planted in many areas. Few people know that this hardworking native brings the bees and hummingbirds into the garden. They also will sow freely in the right places and can dot a prairie garden in just a few years.

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Echinocereus baileyi, Hedgehog Cactus is a great little prickly for the garden. This plant can get, in time, to a height of 3 feet and the blooms can be seen from across the yard. This is one of the few cactus plants that looks wonderful in the garden and is worth the risk of getting pricks.

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Gilia rubra, Standing Cypress is a wonderful tall plant for drier areas of the garden. This plant can reach heights of up to 6 feet. The feathery leaves are topped with some of the brightest red flowers in the native plant kingdom. This is a real standout; just be sure to leave the seed heads alone for new seedlings year after year.

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Liatris punctata, Gayfeather, a longstanding flower, has been used in flowerbeds for many years now. Puncatata is just one of the many varieties in the wild and all of this species are stunning in the garden. Make sure the area for this plant is well drained or the bulbs tend to rot. This is a great plant for any type of garden.


  About M Fitzgerald  
M FitzgeraldI am a pentecostal preacher, gardener,husband, and a father. I love natives, daylilies, iris, and roses. I love teaching others, be they children or adults, about the garden and plants.

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Subject: Wonderful information!


Posted by melody (from Benton, KY) on August 5, 2007 at 9:12 AM:

This is such a wonderful introduction to our native plants! Thank you so much for doing this well thought-out and informative piece. We should all try to incorporate some of our local natives in whatever type of garden we have.

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Posted by Candyce (from The Monadnock Region, NH) on August 5, 2007 at 10:24 AM:

Great article!

I especially liked the info on the purple coneflower. I don't have any in my garden this year, but plan it for next year. Now I'll know how to better care for it.

Thank you for the article.

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Posted by Horseshoe (from Efland, NC) on August 5, 2007 at 10:46 AM:

Thanks, Mitch! I grow some of those you've listed but now want to find even more! (Especially that cactus!)

Shoe

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Posted by LouC (from Desoto, TX) on August 5, 2007 at 11:21 AM:

Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us, Mitch. Many of these I did not know were native even though they are presently in my cottage garden.

LouC

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Posted by jadajoy (from Newport News, VA) on August 5, 2007 at 12:19 PM:

Thank you for identifying a plant and clearing up the confusion over Allium stellatum. Greatly appreciated!

Joyce

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Posted by Laurie1 (from Burwash Weald
(United Kingdom)) on August 5, 2007 at 1:34 PM:

Interesting read - many thanks.

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Posted by MitchF (from Oklahoma City, OK) on August 5, 2007 at 2:51 PM:

Thank you for reading.

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Posted by KyWoods (from Melbourne, KY) on August 5, 2007 at 2:59 PM:

I always wondered if it was safe to eat the wild onions....thanks!

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Posted by Islandshari (from Kwajalein
(Marshall Islands)) on August 5, 2007 at 4:40 PM:

I too was wondering about the onions....I've grown alliums in my Colorado garden for years...love the flowers, and then the dried flower heads add an interesting contrast with the later blooming flowers....just didn't know if I could eat them. Thanks for the interesting and informative artile Mitch!

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Posted by sugarweed (from Jacksonville, FL) on August 5, 2007 at 5:29 PM:

Really enjoyed this article. Hope dave has some way to save it for reference.
Sidney

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Posted by gessiegail (from Taft, TX) on August 5, 2007 at 7:48 PM:

These are beautiful plants, some of which I know and others are new to me. I get excited to think about native plants which actually add so much to my yard.
Thank you so much for sharing this wealth of information with us.
Gail

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Posted by Mahnot (from DFW area, TX) on August 12, 2007 at 1:15 PM:

Great article, Mitch. Thanks a bunch for doing this.
After having most of my new garden either drown
or fry this year, I am rethinking the whole thing and
will tailor it closer to the native plants you speak of.

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Posted by jadajoy (from Newport News, VA) on August 12, 2007 at 1:42 PM:

I'm starting to look around in VA for native plants I can add to my garden. Thanks!

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Posted by critterologist (from Frederick, MD) on August 12, 2007 at 10:09 PM:

Wonderful! I've found a couple more new-to-me plants that I want to add to my garden... :-)

I confess, I had to look up "forbs." In case I'm not the only one who was wondering...

forb (fôrb)
n.
A broad-leaved herb other than a grass, especially one growing in a field, prairie, or meadow.
[From Greek phorb, fodder, from pherbein, to graze.]

Sidney, you can find past articles by clicking on the new "articles" tab at the top of the home page. (FYI, I think Dave is about to reorganize all these tabs under some general tab headings... there was a thread about it in the DG forum.)

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Posted by MitchF (from Oklahoma City, OK) on August 13, 2007 at 9:28 AM:

Ford was one of the words I had to learn when I started to work in natives at school.

Glad you loved it. These are great plants.

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