Adiatum pedatum

Maidenhair Fern
Family: Pteridaceae (Maidenhair Ferm Family)
       
·        Hardiness Zones:  3-8
·        Height: 12-24 inches
·        Spread: 12-18 inches
·        Bloom: non flowering
·        Light: part shade to full shade
·        Soil: average, well-drained; prefers humusy soils
·        Moisture: medium
·        Use: shaded border, woodland garden, shaded rock garden or native plant garden
·        Care: low maintenance
·        Concerns: no serious insect or disease problems
·        Native to: North America, Asia
·        Notes: lacy, fan-shaped, green fronds; spreads slowly by creeping, branching rhizomes
·        Supplier: Kopke's Fruit of the Bloom
·        Teaching Garden Location & Code: Shade Garden F234

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Asclepias verticillata

Whorled Milkweed
Family: Apocynaceae (Dogbane Family)
       
·        Hardiness Zones:  4-9
·        Height: 12-24 inches
·        Spread: 12-24 inches
·        Bloom Time: June to September
·        Bloom: white, in small clusters; flowers give way to smooth, narrow seed pods (to 3” long) which split open when ripe releasing numerous silky-tailed seeds for dispersal by the wind.
·        Light: full sun to part shade
·        Soil: average, well-drained
·        Moisture: dry to medium; prefers hot, dry soils; tolerates moist soils
·        Use: naturalize, rain garden, meadows, prairie, native bed and border; cut flower;  Monarch butterfly, Queen Butterfly and Milkweed Tussock Moth larval host plant; attracts other butterflies like the Great Spangled Fritillary and other beneficial insects like wasps, flies and beetles.
·        Care: mature plants may freely self-seed in the landscape if seed pods are not removed prior to splitting open; does not transplant well due to its deep taproot; best left undisturbed once established
·        Concerns: no serious insect or disease problems
·        Native to: glades, dry prairies, dry slopes, dry open woods, pastures, fields and roadsides in central and eastern North America extending from Massachusetts to Ontario and Saskatchewan south to Arizona and Florida
·        Notes: stems ooze a milky sap when cut or broken
·        Supplier: Agrecol Native Nursery
·        Teaching Garden Location & Code: Demonstration Prairie I001

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Symphyotrichum shortii

Short's Aster
Family: Asteraceae (Aster Family)
       
·        Hardiness Zones:  3-8
·        Height: 3 feet
·        Spread: 12-18 inches
·        Bloom Time: August to October
·        Bloom: 10-20 pale blue-violet ray with yellow center disk
·        Light: part sun
·        Soil: tolerates almost any soil
·        Moisture: medium to medium-dry
·        Use: prairies, borders, native plant gardens, naturalized areas, rain gardens, cottage gardens, butterfly gardens; attracts butterflies and bees
·        Care: low maintenance
·        Concerns: no serious insect problems; can be extremely aggressive and needs competition; good air circulation helps reduce foliar diseases, like powdery mildew;  aster wilt can also be an occasional problem, if grown in poorly-drained clay soils; taller plants require staking
·        Native to: eastern United States
·        Notes: central stems end in foot-long clusters of compound flowers
·        Supplier: Agrecol Native Nursery
·        Teaching Garden Location & Code: Rain Garden J030

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Oenothera speciosa

White Evening Primrose
Family: Onagraceae (Evening Primrose Family)
       
·        Hardiness Zones:  4-9
·        Height: 9-24 inches
·        Spread: 12-18 inches
·        Bloom Time: June to August
·        Bloom: white, fragrant, bowl-shaped, four-petaled white flowers with yellow anthers
·        Light: full sun; tolerates some afternoon part shade
·        Soil: average, well-drained
·        Moisture: dry to medium; tolerates drought
·        Use: best grown in areas where plants can spread without intruding on other plantings such as meadows, wildflower gardents, pollinator gardens; attracts bees and butterflies
·        Care: plants will spread, sometimes aggressively, by rhizomes and self-seeding to form large colonies
·        Concerns: no serious insect or disease problems
·        Native to: Southwestern U.S. to Mexico
·        Notes: narrow, lanceolate to oblanceolate medium green leaves; flowers grow on erect to sprawling stems
·        Supplier: Donated by Karen Allenstein
·        Teaching Garden Location & Code: Pollinator Garden C117

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Leucanthemum x superbum 'Gold Rush'

Shasta Daisy 'Gold Rush'
Family: Asteraceae (Aster Family)
       
·        Hardiness Zones:  4-9
·        Height: 12-14 inches
·        Spread: 12-16 inches
·        Bloom Time: early to late summer
·        Bloom: shaggy double white daisies with center of shorter creamy yellow petals
·        Light: full sun to partial shade
·        Soil: average, sandy or clay
·        Moisture: dry to medium; drought tolerant
·        Use: sunny border, edging, attracts hummingbirds and pollinators, cut flowers
·        Care: divide plants every 2-3 years; remove spent flowers to increase bloom time
·        Concerns: no serious insect or disease problems
·        Native to: hybrid cultivar
·        Notes: deer and rabbit resistant; salt tolerant
·        Supplier: The Flower Factory
·        Teaching Garden Location & Code: Sidewalk Garden G130

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