Firewise & Native Plant: Fireweed

Name: Chamaenerion angustifolium
Common name: Fireweed
Plant type: Hardy Perennial Wildflower
Height: 4’ – 6’
Spread: 1’ – 3’
Bloom Time: June – September
Flower Color: Pink to Rose Purple
Exposure: Full Sun to Part Shade
Soil Requirements: Organically Rich, Well-Drained; Moist
Water Needs: Medium; Needs Regular Moisture
Attributes: Pollinator Showy Flower; Tall, Showy Wildflower; Attracts Bees & Butterflies
Note: Can Quickly Take Over Garden from Rhizomes & Seeds; Remove Spent Flower Stems for Additional
Bloom; Some susceptibility to powdery mildew, downy mildew, rust and fungal leaf spots. 
Uses: Naturalize; Rock Gardens; Cottage Gardens; Borders
Firewise: YES
Native To: Temperate Northern Hemisphere
Oregon Native: YES
USDA Hardiness Zone: 2 – 7

Report by: Viki Ashford, AGC Member

Photo credit: kallerna, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Allelopathic Sunflower Seeds

As the weather turns chilly and bird feeders go up, here’s a new word for you…..ALLELOPATHY.

?

Allelopathy is where an organism releases natural chemicals that affect the growth of other organisms. How does this apply to your bird feeder? Sunflower seeds. It turns out that many sunflower species, including those used for bird seed, are allelopathic to many other plants, so much so, that they are used as natural weed control. The chemicals contained in most parts of the sunflower, including the roots, seeds, and seed hulls, naturally block the growth of other plants. Basically, the sunflower wages chemical warfare against competing plants. The main allelopathic chemicals that sunflowers produce are terpenes and phenolic compounds. So, bear this in mind when placing your bird feeder (and when growing sunflowers in your garden). Dropped sunflower seeds and hulls, if allowed to build up under your feeder, will kill off most other plants. Plus, it’s always good to keep the area under your feeder tidy to avoid enticing unwanted visitors like rodents, raccoons, skunks, and more.

Fall Seed Collecting 

Collecting Seeds: Collect seeds that are open-pollinated varieties, which means the seeds being saved will produce plants with the same characteristics as the parent.

Annual flowers: Marigolds, Nasturtiums, Cosmos, Calendula, Snapdragons, Amaranth, Sunflower, Morning glory, Zinnias

Perennial flowers: Rudbeckia hirta (Black-eyed Susan), Echinacea purpurea (Coneflower), Coreopsis (Tickseed), Digitalis (Foxglove), Centranthus ruber (Red valerian), Dianthus barbatus (Sweet William), Aquilegia (Columbine). Continue reading

Oregon Native & Firewise Plant

Plant Name:  Asclepias fascicularis

Common name: Narrowleaf Milkweed

Plant type: Deciduous Flowering Perennial

Height: 3’

Spread:  8” – 10”
Bloom Time:  Summer to Fall

Flower Color: Lavender, Pink, Greenish White

Exposure:  Full Sun

Soil Requirements: Good Drainage; Dry to Moist Soil; Grows in Clay Soil

Water Needs:  Low

Attributes:  Attracts Monarch Butterflies; Host Caterpillars; Attracts Native Bees, Bumble Bees; Predatory Insects; Monarch Butterflies lay eggs & larvae feed & mature into chrysalis; Deer Resistant; Drought Tolerant

Note: Open Seed Pods spill Plentiful Silky Hairs; Somewhat Toxic; Spreads by Rhizomes

Uses:  Native Gardens; Pollinator Gardens; Rock Gardens

Firewise:  YES

Native to: Western United States

Oregon Native: YES

USDA Hardiness Zone: 6a – 10b

Article by: Viki Ashford, AGC Member

Photo credit Björn S…Wiki commons

Today in the Garden

Member Goly Ostovar shares her summer flowers.

Bougainvillea plants that I overwinter indoors.

Sacred Datura, planted from seed. Flowers open in a half hour window from bud stage to full bloom at dusk, they have a heavenly aroma and last for a day.

The amaranth, also started from seed, have tassels that are growing fast and getting longer every day. Amaranth is a great plant to let go to seed for wintering birds.

Canna lilies are putting on new shoots.

The Zinnia patch in doing well with some new Benary’s Giant varieties.