Anonymous wrote:Are there any other nurseries that are good for native shrubs?Willing to make a drive for a good selection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Toxicodendron Radicans”. It’s absolutely, positively native to eastern North America.
Low maintenance, easy to care for, drought tolerant and it has essentially no pest or deer browsing problems. Does well in sun, partial shade or full shade. Any soil type as long as it’s not waterlogged. Pretty much the perfect plant-it-and-forget-it perennial.
Don't be a jerk, PP. This is one of the few spaces on DCUM without a$$holes.
Some of our native plant “enthusiasts” (fetishists?) can get pretty tedious at times with their evangelistic adherence to native plant dogma.
OP specifically asked for native shrubs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is a guide for you:
https://www.plantnovanatives.org/_files/ugd/9c55f5_1d2d3e0424f0420dacbfc78a48acfb41.pdf
There is a section on shrubs and their ideal conditions (sun/shade and moisture tolerance).
In your shoes, I would look into Viburnum. They’re easy plants with multi season interest and high value for wildlife. Another un-fussy plant with multi-season interest is the Virginia sweetspire. It’s a great pollinator magnet. Since it suckers a bit (easy to remove), I always have some to give away come Spring. Join the Virginia Native Plant Swap group on FB. We are great enablers, and happy to send everyone home with new plants. There is a whole another group in Vienna as well.
Doesn’t viburnum need sun? I think OP said shady. I have the same problem and am also looking for something!
Anonymous wrote:Here is a guide for you:
https://www.plantnovanatives.org/_files/ugd/9c55f5_1d2d3e0424f0420dacbfc78a48acfb41.pdf
There is a section on shrubs and their ideal conditions (sun/shade and moisture tolerance).
In your shoes, I would look into Viburnum. They’re easy plants with multi season interest and high value for wildlife. Another un-fussy plant with multi-season interest is the Virginia sweetspire. It’s a great pollinator magnet. Since it suckers a bit (easy to remove), I always have some to give away come Spring. Join the Virginia Native Plant Swap group on FB. We are great enablers, and happy to send everyone home with new plants. There is a whole another group in Vienna as well.