Tag Archive for: Lilium michiganense

As announced, we travel local this weekend trough Eastern and Central North American woodlands with:

Amphicarpaea bracteata, American hog-peanut
Asclepias exaltata, Poke Milkweed
and Aronia melanocarpa, Black Chokeberry – counting as new for this season, so we’ll stop for a few seconds to talk about it.

The Black Chokeberry is a great shrub for the wildlife garden, with white flowers in the spring, glossy green leaves which turn red in the fall and black/blue edibles berries. It usually grows as a shrub and it also spreads by root suckers.

Black Chokeberry is a very tough shrub that can be grown in full sun or part-shade, and adapts well to a wide range of soils; the more moisture has the more vigorous will grow.
Usually seen growing/sold as a medium size shrub, in less than optimal conditions in the wild, it can be dwarfed by the winds and snow. So, we have the option to keep it pruned and use it as a featured shrub in a large rockery, for example (or other garden situations).

Mitchella repens (Partridge berry) stock was almost depleted, and more seeds are also now available. The same goes for Lilium michiganense. The partridge berry (in the featured image) is a hard to beat evergreen, very low groundcover for rather moist locations.

The Seeds List

Happy Thanksgiving to all celebrating!

Last weekend it was the perfect time for an outing in the woods; they are basking in the golden glow of the sugar maples these days (Acer saccharum).
Other trees foliage also contribute to a beautiful autumnal display: Fraxinus, Fagus, Carya, Juglans, Amelanchier, Prunus, while on the ground floor Thalictrum dioicum, Smilax, and Aralia nudicaulis foliage reflect the same golden colour.

Acer saccharum – Sugar maple, rock maple

Here and there, attractive ‘candies’ of various species can still be enjoyed:  Viburnum acerifolium,  Maianthemum species, Euonymus obovatus and Smilax herbacea. Others, like those of Amphicarpaea bracteata are not that visible, and you need a sharp eye to find them.

It is also a good time to reflect at the natural associations of these woodland species; we can easily reproduced them in the garden. Amphicarpaea flowering stems were threading over Euonymus obovatus
(featured image), Hepatica americana and a nearby Smilax; notice the beautiful clump of Hepatica americana surrounded by the dry foliage of Uvularia grandiflora and the Maianthemum berries shining through Thalictrum dioicum foliage.

Some of these ‘candies’ are already in the shop.
New ones were just added:
Amphicarpaea bracteata
Zizia aurea
Lobelia siphilitica
Lilium michiganense

For the moist packed category in quite small quantities this year: Maianthemum canadense, M. racemosum, M. stellatum and Polygonatum pubescens.

*Native species wise, there will be more seeds to come; the collection goes on until the end of the month. Most species are listed on the Seeds List and will be posted after the seeds are collected and sorted out.

 

Lilium michiganense, Lilium canadense (plus few others) are the kind of lilies that require warmth for the first stage of germination (about 20˚C), and then a period of cold (0-5˚C for 2-3 months) for the true leaves to emerge. If you get these seeds in late fall or winter, this is the tried recipe to make sure that they’ll start growing leaves in the spring:

Place the seeds in a Ziploc bag with moist vermiculite and keep them during the winter months (Nov/Dec.-Feb/March) at room temperature. Check the moisture once in a while. After the tiny bulblets appear, place the Ziplocs in the fridge for the cold treatment (March-May). Pot them afterwards and place outside.

These bulblets had their photos taken and now are ready to switch places in the fridge with the seeds that are coming out for sowing. Some grow out of the seed and are visible, while some can remain more or less enclosed.

And bulblets of another woodland edge growing, tall Lilium (supposedly canadense); we didn’t catch it in flower last year, but it was an impressive exemplar. It has been placed on the ‘watch list’ for this year so we can properly identify it.

Although North American native species, these Liliums and also few others are almost never grown by commercial nurseries. Start growing your own, besides being ‘hot’ plants, they are pollinated by hummingbirds, sphinx moths and butterflies like the Monarch and Spicebush Swallowtail!

Lilium michiganense

Lilium michiganense