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Spring Ephemerals to Treasure in the Garden

Garden Gate

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Issue 182 - Spring 2025

When you walk through the woods in early spring before the trees leaf out, you may be delighted to see lovely wildflowers blooming before anything else is even up and growing.

- Jennifer Howell

Spring Ephemerals to Treasure in the Garden

These spring ephemerals are often woodland natives. They grow under deciduous trees and take advantage of the sunshine by blooming, setting seed, and completing their life cycles before a full canopy of leaves shades the area.

Flowers are fleeting but fascinating. Bees, beetles and ants rely on them for early food, pollinating along the way. While only briefly in the garden, these short-lived flowers have a big impact while they last.

The great thing is that you can also grow these in your garden. Spring ephemerals don't need deadheading or pruning-just plant them in the ground and they'll do their thing. Mix them in beds with other perennials that cover fading foliage as they go dormant, and you won't even need to clean them up. Here are a few easy-to-grow ephemerals to welcome spring and bring life to the garden.

Shooting star
Dodecatheon meadia

It's easy to see how shooting star got its common name the unusual flowers point to earth from the top of a long scape. Petals are turned backward like an inside-out umbrella, with pistils and anthers forming a pointed tube below. The flower has no nectar, but native bees, such as bumblebees, vibrate their bodies to shake out and collect pollen from the flower's pointed end.

Native to the eastern United States, it thrives in soil that is moist in spring but dry in summer when the plant is dormant. It looks great in the front of the border, rising from a bed of ground covers or naturalized into a woodland or meadow garden. Pair it with slower-growing perennials or grasses that will fill in the space after the shooting star dies down.

Though it will spread by seed, it takes several years before it grows to blooming size. To get more plants, divide shooting star in early fall by digging it up and splitting the crown, replanting at the same depth.

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The Best Bulb-Planting Techniques

Let's face it—gardening requires a certain amount of planning ahead. Take bulbs, for example. Those classic spring bulbs we all love, like tulips, daffodils and hyacinths, need to be planted in the fall in much of North America. Finally, after a winter's worth of anticipation, up they come to welcome spring. Worth the wait, isn't it? But what do you need to do to get bulbs off to a good start?

time to read

4 mins

Issue 184 - Fall 2025

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WHICH DAISY IS RIGHT FOR YOU?

Cape daisies Osteospermum hybrids If you want a blast of color, Cape daisies are the plants for you! Available in a rainbow of hues, Cape daisies (sometimes known as African daisies) will add zing to any cool-season planting.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 184 - Fall 2025

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Hosting Butterflies on the Doorstep

Walking out the door one September morning, I saw a tiny black blip at my feet. It was the final molt of a pipevine swallowtail caterpillar, the old, squashed skin (and face!) that drops when a butterfly caterpillar becomes a chrysalis. So, I looked up. And there was the chrysalis, fresh and glistening, hanging from a brick above my head.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 184 - Fall 2025

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Root Wash for a Better Start

Planting trees and shrubs this fall? Try this method to guarantee the roots' long-term health.

time to read

3 mins

Issue 184 - Fall 2025

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The Secret to a Beautiful and Bountiful Vegetable Garden

The first time that New Jersey's Resh Gala tried to grow tomatoes, she didn't get a single edible fruit, thanks to blossom end rot and other struggles.

time to read

3 mins

Issue 184 - Fall 2025

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REPETITION

Learn to apply this pro technique to unify your garden.

time to read

6 mins

Issue 184 - Fall 2025

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Garden Mums

Fall borders look fabulous with these late-season beauties.

time to read

9 mins

Issue 184 - Fall 2025

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One Tough Native Plant!

Whether you're trying to recreate the wild look of a prairie or just need a tough plant for a hot, dry spot, 'Ha Ha Tonka' little bluestem will deliver.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 184 - Fall 2025

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A Cozy Fall Garden Nook

Whether you have an empty garden bed or an eclectic collection of gardening odds and ends, one thing about the side of the garage is that it makes a great hiding place.

time to read

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Debugging Outdoor Plants

After a long, luxurious summer season on the patio, the saddest day in a house plant's life is when it is dragged back indoors before the first frost.

time to read

1 mins

Issue 184 - Fall 2025

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