Native Shrubs

Autumn and Winter Berries Attract Flocks of Birds

The bright red berries of Yaupon olly provide abundant food for birds and are useful for holiday decorating. Photo by Lilly Anderson-Messec

The bright red berries of Yaupon olly provide abundant food for birds and are useful for holiday decorating. Photo by Lilly Anderson-Messec

Bird feeding is an enjoyable hobby; it gives us many hours of enjoyment watching birds up close just outside the window. However, I get even more satisfaction when I observe a bird dining on berries or seeds of trees and shrubs that we have planted in our yard. At our last home, we planted an American beautyberry shrub outside our bedroom window. Each autumn it produced many bright purple berries. One December morning, my daughter and I watched a hermit thrush, a male and a female cardinal and a whitethroated sparrow all feeding at once in this beautiful shrub. That was a colorful sight I will always remember.

Yaupon holly is another favorite of mine. We often see large flocks of robins and cedar waxwings feasting on its shiny translucent red berries. Weeping yaupon is a cultivated form of yaupon that makes a pretty accent plant in the landscape. Savannah and East Palatka hollies are also stunning this time of year. Plant hollies in sun for best fruit production.

The red fruit of the flowering dogwood is among the first to be eaten by both birds and squirrels. Remember to plant your dogwood in good, well-drained soil in some shade. They become stressed when planted in full sun.

Many years ago, we planted a native highbush blueberry just outside our home office window. Every summer, we enjoy watching cardinals and mockingbirds selecting ripe berries; I am happy to share the delicious bounty with them.

There are many other great berry producing native plants that birds love – magnolia, wax myrtle, cherry laurel, and viburnum to name just a few. Cabbage palms, bluestem palmettos and saw palmettos also produce fruit for birds and other wildlife. In early October, my husband Jody and I walked along a short trail at St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge that was naturally lined with cabbage palms loaded with ripe fruit. We saw at least 8 catbirds, lots of boat-tailed grackles, a red-bellied woodpecker and a thrush feasting on the berries and a yellowthroat and other birds in and amongst the thicket of cedar, yaupon and palm.

A word of caution: choose your non-native fruiting plants carefully. Many, like the Chinese tallow tree, may be beautiful and attract a multitude of birds. Unfortunately, the birds spread the seeds and the trees take hold outside of your yard in natural areas of forest and wetland crowding out Florida's native species and upsetting the balance of nature.

Hardy Native Hibiscus

There are a number of Hibiscus species that are native to North Florida. They are fast growing, herbaceous perennials that can reach heights from four to fifteen feet and widths of four to eight feet depending on the species. They’re close relatives to the tropical hibiscus that’s grown in Central and South Florida, but they are much more cold hardy and have larger flowers that attract hummingbirds, butterflies and bees.

These native hibiscus are a great way to add color to your yard, even in areas that stay wet and cause problems for so many other perennials. Don’t worry if you do not have such a wet area however. They also do well in average, somewhat dry garden soil, making them a good choice for rain gardens. Plant native hibiscus in full to part sun, and give them some room. They can produce many stems from the caudex or from the ground around it, and as you read in the previous paragraph, native hibiscus can get quite large.

Propagation is by seed, which will require scarification. In their natural setting, the thick-coated, boyant seeds are dispersed by water. High storm tides sometimes carry them for long distances.

Currently, we have three species available in our native wildflower section. They are:

Crimson-eyed Rose Mallow – Hibiscus moscheutos (pronounced hye BISS kus moss KUE tohss) which has a four to five inch wide white or light pink flower with a blood-red center. Crimson-eyed rose mallow is native from Ontario, Wisconsin and New York south to the Gulf of Mexico, extending west to New Mexico. It is common in marshes and wetlands and is salt tolerant.

Pink Swamp Hibiscus - Hibiscus grandiflorus (pronounced hye BISS kus gran de FLOOR us) has beautiful six to eight inch rosy-pink flowers and blooms from late spring to fall. It has rich, fuzzy gray-green foliage on a plant that can grow to fifteen feet in height. It is salt tolerant and can grow in brackish water directly in tidal zones. Don’t be put off by that however. It will also grow in your average garden soil.

Red Swamp Mallow or Scarlet Rose Mallow - Hibiscus coccineus (pronounced hye BIS kus kock SIN ee us) can reach a height of four to eight feet with a three to four foot spread. It has deep red flowers that are five to six inches wide. Unlike crimson-eyed rose mallow and pink swamp hibiscus, red swamp mallow is not salt tolerant. It is however tolerant of a wide variety of soil types and conditions – extended flooding, acidic, sand, loam and clay. The owners of the nursery have had red swamp mallow in their yard for two years. It is four to five feet tall, and Donna says it blooms from Memorial Day to Labor Day.

Here’s one last note of interest about red swamp mallow. Half a dozen times or more in the fifteen years I’ve worked here at Native Nurseries, I’ve had customers (with a grin and a twinkle in their eye) point this plant out to me. They’re always male and of a certain age (they were young men in the 60s or 70s). At that point I know I’m about to hear The Story. The Story can vary – especially as to whether it happened to this particular customer, someone he knows or someone he knows who knew someone. It usually involves The Feds, helicopters and mistaken identification (plant identification). You see the foliage of red swamp mallow looks a whole lot like marijuana. It’s an entertaining story, and maybe it even happened somewhere, sometime. Whether it did or not however, red swamp mallow and the other native, hardy hibiscus make great additions to any yard or garden that has the room for them.

At Native Nurseries, we typically stock native hibiscus in 1- and 3-gallon pots. Currently we have red swamp mallow in both and pink swamp hibiscus and crimson-eyed rose mallow in 1-gallon. As always, give us a call to check availability before making a special trip (although we’re always happy to see you).

Some information for this blog post came from the following sources –

https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/fp253

http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/forb/hibmos/all.html

https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/ep245

Cardinal Guard a/k/a Firespike

If you like hummingbirds and have a shady yard, you’ll love cardinal guard, also known as firespike (Odontonema cuspidatum). Its beautiful, crimson red flowers will brighten your shady nooks in late summer and fall – just in time to provide plenty of nectar for the hummers as they’re bulking up for their trip across the Gulf to their winter range in Central America and Mexico. With enough water, cardinal guard will grow in the sun, but we recommend it for shady landscapes. In its native Mexico and Panama, cardinal guard is evergreen and blooms all year. Here in Tallahassee, it is an herbaceous perennial. It dies to the ground each winter but sprouts again reliably in the spring. Plant it in good fertile soil. It grows in clumps, spreading by root suckers. The stems grow to four to five feet in height. The foliage is a beautiful, dark glossy green.

Cardinal guard is easy to grow and mostly pest free. You may occasionally find mealybugs or leaf hoppers on them; but personally, I’ve never seen them infested to the point I would recommend any treatment. Let the birds and beneficial insects take care of this one for you.

At Native Nurseries, we typically stock cardinal guard in 1- and 3-gallon pots. Currently we have both. As always, give us a call to check availability before making a special trip (although we’re always happy to see you). Sorry . . . we do not ship plants.

NOTE – As you would expect, we here at Native Nurseries encourage you to use native plants in your yard and garden. When planted in locations that meet their requirements, they are well adapted to our climate and soils and have long established ecological relationships with the animals that share their habitats. We also carry some non-natives (such as cardinal guard) that are non-invasive, easy to maintain and serve a purpose.

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