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Native Wild Flowers for Gardening - Best Perennial Plants for Pollinators & Landscaping | Perfect for Home Gardens, Meadows & Eco-Friendly Yards
Native Wild Flowers for Gardening - Best Perennial Plants for Pollinators & Landscaping | Perfect for Home Gardens, Meadows & Eco-Friendly YardsNative Wild Flowers for Gardening - Best Perennial Plants for Pollinators & Landscaping | Perfect for Home Gardens, Meadows & Eco-Friendly Yards

Native Wild Flowers for Gardening - Best Perennial Plants for Pollinators & Landscaping | Perfect for Home Gardens, Meadows & Eco-Friendly Yards

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Product Description

The authors introduce the reader to the landscape possiblities of plants frequently overlooked, or those wrongly considered to be common and therefore unintersting. Gardeners from just east of the Great Plains to the Atlantic will find detailed information on which plants to use and how to use them. There are extensive plant lists for both shady and sunny garden spots and for boggy sites, as well as chapters on native groundcovers; ferns and fern allies; and grasses, sedges, and rushes. These are complemented by over 200 color photographs to create a beautiful and handy guide.

Customer Reviews

****** - Verified Buyer

This book is not meant to be an encyclopedia but a guide to gardening in the midwestern and eastern US. After the opening discussion of general issues (planning, management, soil, light, nutrients, pH, etc.) come several sections, each of which provides gardening information and detailed lists of native plants according to several possible sites -- sun, shade, meadow, bog -- plus separate sections for ferns, for grasses, sedges, and rushes, and for native ground covers. This is exactly what I've been looking for! A note to the reviewer who complained of the book's including the invasive Lythrum salicaria (purple loosestrife). Had you looked on p. 165 where it is cited in the Index, you would have seen this warning: "This introduced species with tall, magenta-colored spikes has become a noxious weed along stream banks and around ponds in the North, choking out many interesting native species. Purple Loosestrife is so aggressive that it should never be planted."