Garden: Deer resistant plants for the Hudson Valley NY
Collection by Hudson Valley Gardens Blog
Deer don't like to eat these plants and shrubs. These plants grow well in zone 5, check your USDA zone before purchasing. Make sure your soil and sunlight are appropriate for the plants. These plants are unpleasant to deer.
Northern US
This specialty plant nursery sells unusual and uncommon deer resistant plants, plants for sale, buy Landscape Plants Deer dislike, Plants rarely eaten by Deer, white tail deer, Odocoileus virginianus, NJ retail plant nursery, mailorder plant nursery
Goldenrod is a native perennial plant that is deer resistant. In late summer, the beautiful yellow flowers provide nectar for butterflies and bees.
Landscape Plants Rated by Deer Resistance (Rutgers NJAES)
Landscape plants rated by deer resistance. Check whether a specific plant will be eaten by deer. A study by Rutgers University.
Deer Busters: The Top Deer-Resistant Plants for the Northeast
If deer treat your yard like a buffet line, try these plants. But keep in mind that deer in your neighborhood may have already developed a taste for some of these plants. Unfortunately, deer do not read lists.
Turtlehead Flowers – Information For Growing Turtlehead Chelone Plants
Turtlehead flowers resemble the head of a turtle, earning the plant this popular name. So what is turtlehead? Read this article to find out more about this plant and how to care for it in your garden.
The University of Texas at Austin
Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center focused on protecting and preserving North America's native plants through native plant lists and image galleries, conservation, education, natural landscapes, seed collection - Millennium Seed Bank (MSB) Project, preserving and restoring native communities, spreading awareness on invasive species and gardening to attract wildlife. We deliver useful information, latest low impact development trends and techniques, useful gardening tips, innovative…
Hot Plants for Spring 2011
With Witchhazels in bloom and daffodil buds emerging, my spring fever is nearing its peak. I wanted to dedicate a few blogs to plants that I think will be hot this spring. I’ve spent time going through stacks of 2011 catalogues, going to nursery trade shows, and talking to designers and breeders, so I have narrowed down my finalists. Today’s pick for hot plants 2011: The Genius Geum Genus Geum 'Totally Tangerine' bred by Tim Crowther UK. Image from Bluestone Perennials. Try and say that…
Candy Mountain Foxglove
'Candy Mountain' ushers in a whole new color for foxgloves, with plants that grow to a maximum of 4 ft. Our potted 'Candy Mountain' Foxglove plants will bloom for you in their first season; their seeds, however, produce true biennials that only bring blooms in the second season of growth. As a Digitalis purpurea, 'Candy Mountain' is a descendent of Wild Foxglove. The Foxglove Story The very important Wild Foxglove, Digitalis purpurea is a native of the UK, naturalized in the US, and famous…
Plant Profile for Geum ‘Flames of Passion’ - Geum Perennial
This repeat-blooming Geum (or Avens) is an exciting breakthrough. The plant bears a summer-long display of small, rounded semi-double scarlet flowers, held on wiry black stems above a low clump of dark-green leaves...
'Walker's Low' catmint - FineGardening
This mound of lavender-blue flowers and aromatic, grayish green leaves up to 2 feet tall and 3 feet wide is great as edging or in a border, herb, or rock garden.
Turtle head (Chelone oblique) Blooms late summer, shade plant. I have this plant in my garden and really love it! There is also a white flowered variety that is native to NY. A good source of late summer nectar for insects and humming birds