Sunday, August 29, 2010


Bayscape Blog
Native Plant of the Month for August

By Judy DeFiglio 8/29/10

August can be a difficult time of transition in your garden. Many of the colorful flowers blooming in June and July have withered, especially this year with the extreme heat, and the glorious colors of autumn have yet to arrive. A great choice to fill this gap and add a spark to your landscape is Clethra alnifolia (Sweet Pepperbush), our Native Plant of the Month for August.
Clethra is an easy care shrub that just about anyone can grow no matter where they garden. It grows 4 to 8 feet tall and can take either sun or shade and wet or dry conditions. Clethra has attractive dark green, quilted leaves that turn golden yellow in fall and numerous spikes of fragrant, white flowers that bloom in July and August and last four to six weeks. The flowers are followed by interesting gray seed capsules that remain on the plant into the winter. These pods are the reason that Clethra got its common name, Sweet Pepperbush.
If all this wasn’t enough to get you hooked, the flowers of the Clethra attract butterflies, so this shrub is a good alternative for the overplanted Buddleia (butterfly bush) that is becoming invasive in our area.

Monday, August 23, 2010


We are halfway through August and that means summer will soon be coming to a close, but there is still plenty to see in the garden. While many plants are suffering due to the continuing intense heat and drought conditions, the native plants in my garden are thriving. The blooms of the Echinacea (coneflower) and Rudbeckia (Black-eyed-Susans) have been going strong for over a month now and look very colorful next to the brown of my burnt up lawn. Many natives like asters, and goldenrod are getting ready to put on their spectacular fall show. The native grasses, still green without any irrigation, are developing their seed heads that will add interest to my landscape all winter long. More color is added to the late summer garden as many of the native shrubs like Aronia (chokeberry) begin their berry display. If you and your garden have suffered from the heat this summer maybe it’s time to incorporate some natives into your landscape