Latin for Gardeners

Latin for Gardeners: September 2021

September’s Native Maryland Plant
Silphium perfoliatum L. var connatum
(SIL-fee-um per-foh-lee-AY-tum var kon-NAH-tum)
Common Name: Cup Plant

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During September, historically Maryland’s wettest month, I visit the ten rain barrels in my yard frequently - removing any debris from their screens and doing my best to drain them before the next storm.   Two years ago, I planted what I thought was the straight-species Silphium perfoliatum in front of the three 65-gallon cascading barrels above; the plants were a surprise gift from my friend, a notably experienced and excellent gardener.  They were already big plants with well-established roots, so I had high confidence they’d succeed being replanted. I knew they would flower best in full sun and that they could be aggressive spreaders so I sited them where they could ‘dress up’ my rain barrels and be somewhat contained.  So far it appears this is a case of ‘Right Plant, Right Place’ as well as a case of ‘Wrong Plant, Wrong Place’.

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Let me explain. The plant has flourished, its natural habitat includes road-side ditches and disturbed sites; it has also proven worthy of its common name - Cup plant. In May its meristems (young growth) are fully emerged, and the large serrated and sessile leaves have already formed a cup that captures rain and provides drinking water for bees and birds.  The hairy stems are one characteristic that set this species apart from the straight-species and how I identified this plant as var connatum. i.e. the ‘wrong plant’. I’ve read it’s native to the mid-Atlantic states, but lists disagree on whether that includes Maryland.

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Silphium spp. have a long bloom period and provide an abundance of flowers for pollinators. Their seed heads are enjoyed by birds in the fall. They are highly adapted to endure extreme weather and inhospitable site conditions – as they’ve shown in my garden where they’re in a highly exposed location, susceptible to wind and disturbance.

When accepting plants from friends or neighbors I’d like to offer a note of caution. In my experience, most people give plants from their garden because they have an excess of them – they do it in good faith and in friendship, never intending to do harm. However, frequently the ‘gifted’ plants are aggressive, non-native plants that can displace native plants – in the past I’ve been offered Daylilies (Hemerocallis spp.) and Lily-of-the-Valley (Convallaria spp.), two plants I know better than to plant due to their invasive nature. I’m always hesitant to accept plants as a gift, I have limited space in my yard, I give preference to certain plants, and I try my best to only plant natives.  I’ve been impressed with this Cup plant; it’s shown itself to be adaptable and very attractive to pollinators – combined with its water-storing ability I find it the perfect blooming companion to my rain barrels.

~ Alison Milligan – Mstr. Gardener/Mstr. Naturalist/Mstr. Watershed Steward

Chesapeake Bay Landscape Professional (CBLP)

aligmilligan@gmail.com

Latin for Gardeners: July 2021

July’s Native Maryland Plant
Delphinium exaltatum
(del-FIN-ee-um eks-all-TAY-tum)
Common Name: Tall Larkspur

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July is our hottest month, a time when I prefer to ‘look but not touch’ my garden – it’s just too darn hot! Yet I want my garden to look great, full of color and blooming profusely so I can attract hordes of pollinators and observe them up close or at a distance. Delphinium exaltatum is one plant that exceeds my summer-blooming expectations both in flower-bearing and pollinator attraction. 

Thinking back a few years, I remember that I almost did not buy this species, mainly due to its very tall stature. I recall seeing this plant in my youth, along woodland borders and on roadsides in New England.  Today the biggest threat to roadside Delphinium is habitat loss, mainly due to physical disturbance, widening roads and the severe clearing regimen that severely impacts this and many other plants’ ability to flower or set seed.

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Choosing to plant Delphinium in my landscape helps to sustain its population and guarantees that I have a tall blooming flower in the back of my beds that draws in butterflies and hummingbirds as well as a variety of bee species. Because it prefers cooler nights, I planted it where it receives only morning sun and where it is protected from strong winds.  The flower color ranges from white to lavender to purple and as its name implies, it is much taller than the earlier blooming and also native, Dwarf Larkspur (Delphinium tricorne).  

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I find the structure and silhouette of this plant particularly captivating, and as to its stature, I’ve determined that many of my favorite perennials are very tall, excellent pollinator plants and often endangered; it’s up to me to plant them, to promote them and to support them however and whenever necessary – they reward me and pollinators many times over.


¹ A tapering, sometimes curving projection.

~ Alison Milligan – Mstr. Gardener/Mstr. Naturalist/Mstr. Watershed Steward

Chesapeake Bay Landscape Professional (CBLP)

aligmilligan@gmail.com

Latin for Gardeners: June 2021

June’s Native Maryland Plant
Solidago juncea Aiton
(so-li-DAY-go JUN-kee-uh)
Common Name: Early Goldenrod

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It’s the year of Brood X and I don’t need to go outside to hear the deafening sound of cicadas; they’re on many of my plants and I often find them climbing up my pantleg or awkwardly flying past me as I meander through my yard. It’s during these brief encounters that I’m glad that I listened to Haley.

In 2019, I gave the Watershed Stewards Academy a tour of my yard to demonstrate many native plants that are used to address common landscaping problems.  As the group came to my pollinator garden, I mentioned that I had recently noticed that the Solidago juncea, planted in the rear of the garden, was slowly encroaching on my shorter plants and may need to be managed or possibly removed and relocated, in favor of the shorter plants.  Without hesitation, Haley, a young WSA staff member, said, “But Alison, goldenrod is such a valuable pollinator plant, I don’t think you should get rid of it.” After the tour finished and everyone had gone home, I thought about Haley’s immediate defense of this plant and I decided to keep a closer eye on it.  I knew that fall-blooming goldenrod was especially important for late-season bees, but was a summer-blooming goldenrod equally valuable? If so, was it possible for me to constrain it rather than eliminate it entirely?

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After two years of observation, I’m convinced that Solidago juncea is a consistent pollinator favorite, attracting a variety of bees and butterflies, as well as some unique beneficial insects, namely scoliid, sand, potter and cicada killer wasps – all solitary and non-aggressive wasps that I enjoy observing. Scoliid wasps are a particular favorite because they feast on June beetle grubs that nest in lawns, sand wasps feed their larvae the invasive brown marmorated stink bug, potter wasps feed their larvae caterpillars, commonly cankerworm and sawfly. And cicada killers, well, what can I say?  Although they are more than just a predator of the annual cicadas (they also pollinate plants), I’m delighted to have any insect in my yard that will reduce the cicada population.

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Solidago juncea is a solitary or few-stemmed perennial that provides a nice contrast to the many purple and blue flowers blooming in summer. I’ve come to embrace its stature and find its plumes add a nice structural element, even through the winter.  The diversity of beneficial insects it attracts makes it valuable to me as it may to anyone interested in integrated pest management (IPM).  Thanks Haley, for taking a stand for goldenrod - an often under-appreciated plant in any garden.

~ Alison Milligan – Mstr. Gardener/Mstr. Naturalist/Mstr. Watershed Steward

Chesapeake Bay Landscape Professional (CBLP)

aligmilligan@gmail.com

Latin for Gardeners: May 2021

May’s Native Maryland Plant
Iris versicolor
(EYE-riss VER-suh-kuh-lor)
Common Name: Blue flag

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The genus Iris contains over 250 species, but only a few of them are native to Maryland. Fortunately, Iris versicolor is one of them. This plant is a rhizomatous monocot¹ with nectar guides on the petals and sepals that are visible to both bees and humans – this is not often the case. Bees are particularly attracted to flowers that are blue, purple, white and yellow and Iris versicolor give them all of that and more. They offer a landing pad (falls) where pollen collects and a substantial nectary. As the bee enters the flower it squeezes under the style arm, scrapes off the pollen, and transfers it to the stigma where it germinates.

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Iris flowers are special enough to merit unique terminology and their own day on the calendar – Iris Day in 2021 is on May 8th. These exceptional plants also have some salt-tolerance and are a valuable plant in any naturally wet area of a landscape or in the center of a rain garden since they thrive in moist-wet conditions.  Another of their great features - they are deer-tolerant.

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A single Iris is a vision to behold but as any good gardener knows – more is always better! Enjoy the blooms of May and be sure to celebrate the iconic and irresistible Iris on May 8th.

¹ -Monocot leaves generally arise from a single point and feature parallel veins. Monocot flower parts are mostly in multiples of three e.g. three sepals, three petals

~ Alison Milligan – Mstr. Gardener/Mstr. Naturalist/Mstr. Watershed Steward

Chesapeake Bay Landscape Professional (CBLP)

aligmilligan@gmail.com