Sep 23, 2024
In this episode of Down the
Garden Path, Joanne Shaw discusses how to extend the blooming
season in your garden by adding asters.
Topics covered in this week's
episode:
- Gardens
don't have to stop blooming in September. We can extend the season
to October and November.
- It’s
very important to have because the pollinators still need something
blooming.
- There
are over 30 different species of asters.
- They
have a huge variety of growing conditions, so there is an aster for
whatever challenging growing condition you have.
Here are the five asters
discussed:
- New England Aster, Symphyotrichum
nova-angliae
- The
showiest, and likely the one you’re most familiar with
- Native
to most U.S. states and provinces
- It is
large and very showy, with a bright cozy blue flower with a yellow
centre
- The
leaves on the stem are densely arranged on the stem
- Prefer
soil moist and they can grow in part shade
- One of
the larger varieties: up to six feet tall
- Whitewood Aster Eurybia
divaricata
- Delicate looking flowers
- Grows
in dry shade which means it makes a wonderful addition to the shade
garden
- Not
super showy like most shade plants
- Found
in Ontario in dry, deciduous forests
- So
that's exactly what we want in our garden. If you have maple trees,
pine trees, or something like that where the soil underneath is
very dry and it's very shady, then this is something worth giving a
try to
- Only
gets two to three feet tall
- Smooth Aster Symphyotrichum
laeve
- Similar
to the New England Aster, although hence its name, it has leaves
that are very smooth lavender and blue
- Has a
daisy-type flower with a yellow centre
- Blooms
from August to October
- A huge
pollinator for butterflies and a larvae host for the pearl crescent
butterfly
- Heart leaf Aster Symphyotrichum
cordifolium
- Lavender to light blue
- It is
one of the latest ones to bloom and actually goes into
November
- An
excellent pollinator for butterflies and bees at late in the
season
- Spreads
slowly by rhizomes and it lightly self-seeds
- Two to
three feet tall, sandy to loam soil, and part shade to full
shade
- Panicled Aster Symphyotrichum
lanceolatum
- This
one blooms with sprays of white flowers, open spreading form, so
also known as floppy
- Best
grown with other plants to kind of support it
- If you
already have a native garden, or if you're planting a native garden
with other large tall plants, then this could be an addition if you
want that
- Prefers
moist soil, but it likes full sun
- You can
purchase seeds from Wildflower Farm and you can again,
sprinkle them or plant them in your garden this fall
- You can
also start them like you normally would do if you wanted them to
grow in February/March under lights and go through that type of
thing indoors and then put them out next year
Resources Mentioned in
the Show:
Down the Garden Path: A
Step-By-Step Guide to Your Ontario Garden
Fall Mums and Asters
Have a topic you'd like
me to discuss?
Please let me know what other
topics you would like me to discuss.
Email your questions and comments
to downthegardenpathpodcast@hotmail.com,
or connect with me on my website: down2earth.ca
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@downthegardenpathpodcast.
Down the Garden Path
Podcast
On Down The Garden Path, professional
landscape designer Joanne Shaw discusses
down-to-earth tips and advice for your plants, gardens and
landscapes. As the owner of Down2Earth Landscape Design,
Joanne Shaw has been designing beautiful gardens for homeowners
east of Toronto for over a decade. She does her best to bring you
interesting, relevant and useful topics to help you keep your
garden as low maintenance as possible.
In Down the Garden Path: A
Step-By-Step Guide to Your Ontario Garden, Joanne and
fellow landscape designer Matthew Dressing distill their
horticultural and design expertise and their combined experiences
in helping others create and maintain thriving gardens into one
easy-to-read monthly reference guide.
Get your copy today
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