Native Antennaria: A Ground Cover with Beautiful Texture

I’ve waxed starry eyed about Antennaria as a ground cover before, but I couldn’t find the photo I took that really highlights the amazing texture of this plant. Imagine this creeping between native stone pavers in an informal patio setting.  The texture is almost exotic, while the gray-green color is truly Wyoming native!

Native Plant List for Wyoming

For those just getting their feet wet in gardening with natives or landscaping with natives, the following list found at PlantNative.org is a good place to start. It’s not easy finding plant lists specific to Wyoming. I have no trouble finding native gardening information for California, or even Colorado, but most of the plants used…

Penstemon for Astounding Blue

I’m an amateur botanist, but I’m pretty sure this is Penstemon glaber and P. angustifolia, respectively. For astounding blues, I don’t think any hybridized plant can beat them. I don’t think I have ever seen a flower with the sky blue of Penstemon angustifolia, a Wyoming native that likes poor, dry, sandy soil.  I was…

Cold Stratification of Native Plant Seeds

Many of our Wyoming native plants require cold stratification for germination of seed. “Cold stratificaton” is a fancy term for “needs some time spent in cold dirt.” It’s easy to understand. If a northern plant naturally distributes its seeds in the autumn, those seeds will spend the winter being subjected to cold and rain and…

Look to Nature for Natives

Landscaping with native plants lends itself to a looser form of planning. Although some native species are suited to the formal garden, I prefer to place  native plants in a garden setting which reflects the essence and uniqueness of the surrounding native landscape. Native plant gardens don’t have to look “wild” in the sense that…

Ground Cover Antennaria Has Low Water Requirement

It’s hard to beat Antennaria for a ground cover in dry areas. Antennaria, also known as Pussy Toes, has flowers which resemble cats’ paws. This native plant is very drought tolerant and makes a beautiful ground cover around pavers and rocks. The species shown is Antennaria microphylla with its wonderfully silvery grey mat forming leaves….

An Uncommonly Warm Autumn

We finally registered a hard frost in the town of Casper, Wyoming.  Now, the folks out on the prairie got their killing frost way back in September- much more the norm for central Wyoming. Our average first frost date is somewhere around the end of August to the first week in September, so you can…

Speaking Plant Latin

Ever wondered if you’re pronouncing a plant’s Latin name correctly? When you read about, talk about and research about native plants and drought tolerant plants like I do, you are sure to start depending on the Latin names versus common plant names, because the common names change from place to place and source to source….

Landscape Planning in the Long Winter Evenings

We are having a wonderful, warm, windless autumn here in central Wyoming, but the days are getting noticeably shorter and winter isn’t far away. My mind is already turning to plans for next spring’s landscaping efforts. My planning always includes looking for resources of native plants, drought tolerant plants and ground covers suitable for my…

Wyoming’s Native Crataegus Tree

Cratageus is a very adaptable Wyoming native tree suitable for a variety of uses. It can be pruned into a hedge, left to grow into a multi-stemmed clump 15 – 25 feet tall, and  I wonder if it couldn’t be groomed into a single stemmed ornamental tree. The University of Wyoming Cooperative Extension named Cratageus…

Eriogonum umbellatum: An amazing native ground cover

Also known as Sulfur flower and Buckwheat, Eriogonum umbellatum is one of my favorite native plants of Wyoming. It consists of a ground cover of small ovate leaves  4 inches high and topped with flower stems 8-10 inches tall. In my gardens it has grown to cover a 24 inch circular patch. In Wyoming we…