Wow, thank you for the information. In California we didnt have the fireflies like i am seeing out here in Arkansas, i love it. I have twinkling kind of lights on my deck that turn off at 930pm and then at 10 is when i see the fireflies. I now am unplugging those lights.
@JLWall278 күн бұрын
Thank you for another great, informative video! Much appreciated!
@Dharmacats2309 күн бұрын
kzread.infoMNgjhtGrMwk?si=VF769_IdODCi8qCm
@Dharmacats2309 күн бұрын
kzread.infoMNgjhtGrMwk?si=VF769_IdODCi8qCm
@RenewedRS10 күн бұрын
I just bought one and instantly regret it
@vernamcguire675910 күн бұрын
I have really learned SO MUCH from this segment! Thank you from Californis, Were inland and zone 9 B. I have been doing California natives for 4 years now ans planting more and more natives in our acre. Thank you again. Our motto : If you plant it , Theu WILL COME 🦋🐛🐞🪲🐝
@5ree6url12 күн бұрын
Cultivars of native pollinator host plants can be detrimental to them. Pollinators may love the nectar, but can they recognize the plant as a place to lay their eggs? Has the plant been changed in ways that make them not suitable for the larvae to consume and thrive upon? These should be considered. It's better not to choose cultivars.
@elenapolenichkina646014 күн бұрын
Thank you for the information! Very inspiring! Can you do a video about native plants you can plant under trees in part shade?
@eigleenalegri266415 күн бұрын
Thank you for an informative video. I learned a lot. This
@SarahAnderson-j8d16 күн бұрын
Great video, thank you for the information! If everyone even planted a few, we would help our pollinator and winged friends so much <3
@jasonkilgore197717 күн бұрын
I really enjoy watching your videos. Just like this one I have even been going back and watching your older ones thank you.
@davidarango487322 күн бұрын
Great info! Would love to see a video about native ground cover you guys recommend? Thanks!
@LongislandnativeSanctuary24 күн бұрын
love this!! i am so excited for the native plants
@vilmat.gonzalez275925 күн бұрын
I love the information, but the quality of the videos is so blurry, bad.
@jordansmith416725 күн бұрын
Great video❤
@elenapolenichkina646025 күн бұрын
Great information! Thank you!
@James-pp6hb27 күн бұрын
Thank you for taking the time to make this video and share your expertise. I am just getting started and appreciate all of the information provided. I have begun identifying all of the trees and shrubs in my yard and cannot believe how few are native or “contributors.” I am excited and eager to begin the transition.
@NativePlantChannel25 күн бұрын
Thank you James for going native!
@outdoorztime292327 күн бұрын
Excellent. I forwarded this to my wife, so she can share with her classroom.
@a_b431427 күн бұрын
! Online it says this plant grows 6-10 feet tall. In your experience, does it indeed grow larger as evidenced by your arbor? Thanks!
@NativePlantChannel25 күн бұрын
Yes, it does. Hard to tell exactly how tall as it is all intertwined.
@erbthatsright110329 күн бұрын
I have noticed that this year with my lack of cutting my back yard I have been seeing more “Lightning Bugs”!
@drivenmad7676Ай бұрын
As a Maine gardener, i would love to plant more natives.
@ivylarsen5355Ай бұрын
Bought a summer sweet thanks to this video from a native nursery. I’m in FL, but I love your channel and we do share a fair amount of natives.
@queensnynativeplantsАй бұрын
I always enjoy your videos. Informative and just the right length! You have given me good ideas for what to grow next year.
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Awesome! Thank you!
@donnas3148Ай бұрын
Nice to see you.
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thanks for the kind words!
@pigeonmanof180Ай бұрын
Andy is very knowledgeable and well spoken, and we love the CMBG. I was very glad to see some of my favorite natives highlighted here and also disappointed that some others weren’t mentioned like hobble bush, ostrich fern, sweet gale, pagoda dogwood and witch hazel, lamb kill and rhodora, both red and black elderberry, blue flag iris, and June berry. I have had great success growing these in Downeast Maine, and they are truly under appreciated. I could add several more....perhaps Andy could come back and do a part 2.
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Yes, Andy is extremely knowledgable, and there are so many great plants, never enough time to cover them all.
@janfranklin8088Ай бұрын
Great presentation that helped me as a beginner. I like see the different native plants. Thank you
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
So glad you found it helpful!
@GrandmaSandyАй бұрын
Thanks for a wonderful garden tour, my dear friend thank you so much for always sharing something wonderful with us and giving us so much great information
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thanks Sandy!
@ThreeRunHomerАй бұрын
I like common violets too. They volunteer all over and make the densest ground cover imaginable.
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
They are beautiful!
@Javaman92Ай бұрын
I'm in upstate NY, way up on the shore of Lake Ontario. I'm curious about growing blueberries. They need acidic soil. Do you amend your soil to make it more acidic for them?
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
I don't amend my soil for any plant, either it takes the conditions or gets replaced with something else.
@AnthropoidOneАй бұрын
If you can grow azaleas you can grow blueberries, was an adage I heard somewhere. Then again I’m in NC🤣Love Upstate❤️
@roxannewoel7754Ай бұрын
Thanks for posting again. Excellent resource.
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thanks, Roxanne!
@tonisherwood1038Ай бұрын
I love your videos so much! Im in SE Minnesota but most of the plants you talk about are also native here.
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thank you for your kindness and for growing native plants!
@glennknudsen9157Ай бұрын
Lourdes, you’ve been missed! Always great to see a new video from you!
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thanks Glenn, so kind of you!
@jossgreen9318Ай бұрын
I'm constantly telling my mother that violets are The Perfect Plant for our beds, but she's never taken off the 'if it comes up without planting, its a WEED' glasses
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thanks for trying to convince her, maybe if your mom received some candied violets she would enjoy them!
@Donneczka1Ай бұрын
Thank you for these videos! Great resource!
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thank you, I try to give as much information in as little time as possible.
@anabenitez1021Ай бұрын
You always inspire the way I garden. Thank you. Now I'm going to do less 😊
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
LOL, less is more!
@irenevanhoffАй бұрын
Your presentations are so informative! Thank you! Keep it coming! The details you include (like host plants and specialist species, etc) really nail it.
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thanks for mentioning what you like, I try to provide as much information in as little time as possible.
@JustWestieАй бұрын
Fritillaries (in addition to being adorable!) are amazingly hard working in the garden. They are so worth caring for. 😎
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Fritillaries are awesome!
@yogiberra808Ай бұрын
Great to have you back, hope all is well!
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thanks for caring Yogi, all is well. Are you a baseball fan? I'm afraid to tell you I'm a Mets fan, nothing to brag about this year, LOL.
@yogiberra808Ай бұрын
@@NativePlantChannel good to hear, I live in Cubs/Cards country, was a Cardinal fan, but who cares anymore the way players switch teams. But I do still like baseball!
@AnthropoidOneАй бұрын
You and I think along the same lines. I do the same here on my 1 acre in NC.
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Wonderful! Thanks for supporting the ecosystem!
@emiliebovaАй бұрын
Thanks!
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thank you!
@frumpycarrotАй бұрын
We had success moving a 14 year old blue baptisia to another spot in the yard, and taking divisions from the same plant. It looked a little rough after the transplant shock but it came back the following year as if nothing ever happened to it. The division is also coming up nicely in a different state now 😁 I’m sure your mileage may vary depending on conditions.
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thanks for the information!
@phillyhippieАй бұрын
I'm in eastern pa where can I purchase Beauty Berry?
@BeardqtАй бұрын
I don't know if anyone has pointed this out but this video and potentially entire channel is helpful for maryland as well! A lot of, if not all of them are native to MDs wetter clay. Thank you for these incredibly informative videos!
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Thank you for commenting, yes, Native Plant Channel is made for states in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. We share many similar growing conditions and therefore plants, as plants don't operate according to our borders.
@JoseMartinez-df2dbАй бұрын
Do these nativars attract the same amount of wildlife?
@marybosch88Ай бұрын
I have them in my back yard in Fruita Colorado only for about a month in July to August. They blink a yellow light. So cool to see. I hope they come back this year because I have a lot of building going on around me. Only certain parts of Fruita have them.
@therewillbecatswithgwenhwyfarАй бұрын
I am so glad that you discussed the difference between goldenrod and ragweed! I definitely suffer with pollen from ragweed!
@naturalismundi4359Ай бұрын
The future of conservation has to be a concerted effort not to just promote individual responsibility. That's an idea often promoted to establish and redirect action away from legislation, industry and established interests. Worrying over native and introduced plants while habitat loss, rampant pesticide use and grant fueled restorations that often fail ... is perhaps is a better focus. There is an old saying: "Divide them, then rule them". Invasion biology has done that work for Monsanto. Please stop.
@mreunomeАй бұрын
I transplanted a purple and a yellow false indigo which out grew it original location a few years back and they both survived, and some of the purple sprouted up in its original location. Also my yellow false indigo is almost as large as the purple...so I think it's a misnomer to say you can not transplant them or that the yellow false indigo doesn't grow large; they can be successfully transplanted and the yellow false indigo can grow quite big. I'm in Jersey zone 7.
@reimundkrohn8938Ай бұрын
"How to Lie with Statistics" - Sorry, I believe you're just repeating what you've learned, but a shrub (ANY shrub) is not "a tick magnet". The Barberry is Deer resistant, meaning Deer (one of the Wood Ticks favorite hosts) is not interested in Barberry; they will eat it only as a last resort... which means that the Ticks (who lay their egg masses in tall grasses and fallen leaves, not in shrubs) and hatch in an area with a high population of Barberries, won't be likely to encounter the Deer they love to feed on... As ticks respond to ground vibration / movement to find their hosts. No deer in the immediate area = lots of hungry and dormant ticks.... So when a human ventures into the Barberry bushes, they are the first host the tick encounters, hence the PERCEPTION that the Barberry is "a tick magnet", it's not. It's a "Deer Repellant". Completely different thing.
@NativePlantChannelАй бұрын
Several studies have been done in Connecticut discussing the connection between Japanese barberry and ticks. Here is an example of one, you are free to use the internet and look up the information for yourself. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22182557/
@apryllenicole94499 күн бұрын
@@NativePlantChannelI read that ticks hate lavender. I wonder if I plant lavender around my tangelo barberry, will it deter ticks?
Пікірлер
Wow, thank you for the information. In California we didnt have the fireflies like i am seeing out here in Arkansas, i love it. I have twinkling kind of lights on my deck that turn off at 930pm and then at 10 is when i see the fireflies. I now am unplugging those lights.
Thank you for another great, informative video! Much appreciated!
kzread.infoMNgjhtGrMwk?si=VF769_IdODCi8qCm
kzread.infoMNgjhtGrMwk?si=VF769_IdODCi8qCm
I just bought one and instantly regret it
I have really learned SO MUCH from this segment! Thank you from Californis, Were inland and zone 9 B. I have been doing California natives for 4 years now ans planting more and more natives in our acre. Thank you again. Our motto : If you plant it , Theu WILL COME 🦋🐛🐞🪲🐝
Cultivars of native pollinator host plants can be detrimental to them. Pollinators may love the nectar, but can they recognize the plant as a place to lay their eggs? Has the plant been changed in ways that make them not suitable for the larvae to consume and thrive upon? These should be considered. It's better not to choose cultivars.
Thank you for the information! Very inspiring! Can you do a video about native plants you can plant under trees in part shade?
Thank you for an informative video. I learned a lot. This
Great video, thank you for the information! If everyone even planted a few, we would help our pollinator and winged friends so much <3
I really enjoy watching your videos. Just like this one I have even been going back and watching your older ones thank you.
Great info! Would love to see a video about native ground cover you guys recommend? Thanks!
love this!! i am so excited for the native plants
I love the information, but the quality of the videos is so blurry, bad.
Great video❤
Great information! Thank you!
Thank you for taking the time to make this video and share your expertise. I am just getting started and appreciate all of the information provided. I have begun identifying all of the trees and shrubs in my yard and cannot believe how few are native or “contributors.” I am excited and eager to begin the transition.
Thank you James for going native!
Excellent. I forwarded this to my wife, so she can share with her classroom.
! Online it says this plant grows 6-10 feet tall. In your experience, does it indeed grow larger as evidenced by your arbor? Thanks!
Yes, it does. Hard to tell exactly how tall as it is all intertwined.
I have noticed that this year with my lack of cutting my back yard I have been seeing more “Lightning Bugs”!
As a Maine gardener, i would love to plant more natives.
Bought a summer sweet thanks to this video from a native nursery. I’m in FL, but I love your channel and we do share a fair amount of natives.
I always enjoy your videos. Informative and just the right length! You have given me good ideas for what to grow next year.
Awesome! Thank you!
Nice to see you.
Thanks for the kind words!
Andy is very knowledgeable and well spoken, and we love the CMBG. I was very glad to see some of my favorite natives highlighted here and also disappointed that some others weren’t mentioned like hobble bush, ostrich fern, sweet gale, pagoda dogwood and witch hazel, lamb kill and rhodora, both red and black elderberry, blue flag iris, and June berry. I have had great success growing these in Downeast Maine, and they are truly under appreciated. I could add several more....perhaps Andy could come back and do a part 2.
Yes, Andy is extremely knowledgable, and there are so many great plants, never enough time to cover them all.
Great presentation that helped me as a beginner. I like see the different native plants. Thank you
So glad you found it helpful!
Thanks for a wonderful garden tour, my dear friend thank you so much for always sharing something wonderful with us and giving us so much great information
Thanks Sandy!
I like common violets too. They volunteer all over and make the densest ground cover imaginable.
They are beautiful!
I'm in upstate NY, way up on the shore of Lake Ontario. I'm curious about growing blueberries. They need acidic soil. Do you amend your soil to make it more acidic for them?
I don't amend my soil for any plant, either it takes the conditions or gets replaced with something else.
If you can grow azaleas you can grow blueberries, was an adage I heard somewhere. Then again I’m in NC🤣Love Upstate❤️
Thanks for posting again. Excellent resource.
Thanks, Roxanne!
I love your videos so much! Im in SE Minnesota but most of the plants you talk about are also native here.
Thank you for your kindness and for growing native plants!
Lourdes, you’ve been missed! Always great to see a new video from you!
Thanks Glenn, so kind of you!
I'm constantly telling my mother that violets are The Perfect Plant for our beds, but she's never taken off the 'if it comes up without planting, its a WEED' glasses
Thanks for trying to convince her, maybe if your mom received some candied violets she would enjoy them!
Thank you for these videos! Great resource!
Thank you, I try to give as much information in as little time as possible.
You always inspire the way I garden. Thank you. Now I'm going to do less 😊
LOL, less is more!
Your presentations are so informative! Thank you! Keep it coming! The details you include (like host plants and specialist species, etc) really nail it.
Thanks for mentioning what you like, I try to provide as much information in as little time as possible.
Fritillaries (in addition to being adorable!) are amazingly hard working in the garden. They are so worth caring for. 😎
Fritillaries are awesome!
Great to have you back, hope all is well!
Thanks for caring Yogi, all is well. Are you a baseball fan? I'm afraid to tell you I'm a Mets fan, nothing to brag about this year, LOL.
@@NativePlantChannel good to hear, I live in Cubs/Cards country, was a Cardinal fan, but who cares anymore the way players switch teams. But I do still like baseball!
You and I think along the same lines. I do the same here on my 1 acre in NC.
Wonderful! Thanks for supporting the ecosystem!
Thanks!
Thank you!
We had success moving a 14 year old blue baptisia to another spot in the yard, and taking divisions from the same plant. It looked a little rough after the transplant shock but it came back the following year as if nothing ever happened to it. The division is also coming up nicely in a different state now 😁 I’m sure your mileage may vary depending on conditions.
Thanks for the information!
I'm in eastern pa where can I purchase Beauty Berry?
I don't know if anyone has pointed this out but this video and potentially entire channel is helpful for maryland as well! A lot of, if not all of them are native to MDs wetter clay. Thank you for these incredibly informative videos!
Thank you for commenting, yes, Native Plant Channel is made for states in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. We share many similar growing conditions and therefore plants, as plants don't operate according to our borders.
Do these nativars attract the same amount of wildlife?
I have them in my back yard in Fruita Colorado only for about a month in July to August. They blink a yellow light. So cool to see. I hope they come back this year because I have a lot of building going on around me. Only certain parts of Fruita have them.
I am so glad that you discussed the difference between goldenrod and ragweed! I definitely suffer with pollen from ragweed!
The future of conservation has to be a concerted effort not to just promote individual responsibility. That's an idea often promoted to establish and redirect action away from legislation, industry and established interests. Worrying over native and introduced plants while habitat loss, rampant pesticide use and grant fueled restorations that often fail ... is perhaps is a better focus. There is an old saying: "Divide them, then rule them". Invasion biology has done that work for Monsanto. Please stop.
I transplanted a purple and a yellow false indigo which out grew it original location a few years back and they both survived, and some of the purple sprouted up in its original location. Also my yellow false indigo is almost as large as the purple...so I think it's a misnomer to say you can not transplant them or that the yellow false indigo doesn't grow large; they can be successfully transplanted and the yellow false indigo can grow quite big. I'm in Jersey zone 7.
"How to Lie with Statistics" - Sorry, I believe you're just repeating what you've learned, but a shrub (ANY shrub) is not "a tick magnet". The Barberry is Deer resistant, meaning Deer (one of the Wood Ticks favorite hosts) is not interested in Barberry; they will eat it only as a last resort... which means that the Ticks (who lay their egg masses in tall grasses and fallen leaves, not in shrubs) and hatch in an area with a high population of Barberries, won't be likely to encounter the Deer they love to feed on... As ticks respond to ground vibration / movement to find their hosts. No deer in the immediate area = lots of hungry and dormant ticks.... So when a human ventures into the Barberry bushes, they are the first host the tick encounters, hence the PERCEPTION that the Barberry is "a tick magnet", it's not. It's a "Deer Repellant". Completely different thing.
Several studies have been done in Connecticut discussing the connection between Japanese barberry and ticks. Here is an example of one, you are free to use the internet and look up the information for yourself. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22182557/
@@NativePlantChannelI read that ticks hate lavender. I wonder if I plant lavender around my tangelo barberry, will it deter ticks?
Very nice