Native Plant of the Month: Western Azalea
In late spring, the Western Azalea (Rhododendron occidentale) graces stream-side habitats throughout the Santa Cruz Mountains with beautiful white blooms and a fragrant aroma. This showcase shrub will thrive in wetter areas of your garden, providing seasonal interest and food for local pollinators.
Native Plant of the Month: Silver Bush Lupine
The silver bush lupine (Lupinus albifrons) is a striking shrub that offers year-long beauty to sunny, drought-tolerant gardens. With unique silver-green palmate leaves and stunning elongated purple flower clusters, this could be your new favorite native pollinator plant!
Native Plant of the Month: Sedges
Sedges may look like grasses, but they are in fact their own unique group of plants. Often found in wetlands or along streambanks, they can quickly stabilize soil by spreading through underground stems called rhizomes. This also makes them great for creating lush meadows or lawn replacements.
Native Plant of the Month: Pink-flowering Currant
Pink-flowering currant is a versatile native shrub that brings vibrant color and seasonal interest to gardens, offering stunning pink blooms in winter and edible berries in summer. Ideal for woodland settings, it thrives in a variety of soils and is easy to care for.
Native Plant of the Month: Redwood Sorrel
You’re walking around a shady redwood grove and notice a bed of shiny green clover-like plants covering the ground. This native plant is an important understory plant in redwood and Douglas fir forests that supports caterpillars, butterflies, and moths.
Charging Up for Fall: Summer Activities at Our Native Plant Nursery
Heads up, plant enthusiasts! Our Native Plant Nursery is taking a summer break from retail sales, but we’ll be back and blooming on September 9th—just in time to meet all your fall planting needs!
Native Plant of the Month: Wood Rose
Have you noticed the delicate, pink blooms of the wood rose within our local forest understories? This locally native rose is great for adding beauty and pollinator value to a shady garden or balcony.
Native Plant of the Month: Hairy Gumplant
Its sunflower-like blossoms face the sky like golden platters of pollen and nectar, which are constantly swarmed by minute sweat bees, fluttering skippers, and other insects.
Native Plant of the Month: Sticky Monkey Flower
The monkeyflowers are a diverse assemblage of plants, with flower colors ranging from golden yellow and pinkish purple to pale orange and bright red. Their ecological roles are equally varied, with each species having unique habitat preferences and pollinator interactions.
Native Plant of the Month: California Buckeye
California buckeyes are beginning to leaf out, starting yet another cycle of growth, blooming, fruiting, and dormancy for these beautiful native trees.
Native Plant of the Month: Scrub Oak
The California Scrub Oak (Quercus berberidifolia) is an under appreciated, compact oak species that provides huge habitat value while also fitting into smaller yards. California is home to over 20 species of oak. This includes the towering valley oak, which can grow up to 100 feet tall, as well as our ubiquitous and majestic coast live oak. But did you know we have a variety of small, shrub-like oaks as well?
Native Plant of the Month: Brittleleaf Manzanita
Brittleleaf manzanita (Arctostaphylos crustacea) is a stunning local shrub with smooth, red bark and upside-down urn-shaped flowers that attract pollinators in winter. This fire-adapted species is unique to chaparral ecosystems of the central California coast and makes a beautiful focal plant in the garden.
Native Plant of the Month: Coast Silktassel
Coast silktassel (Garrya elliptica) is a shrub to small tree adorned with enchanting catkins of gray flowers in the winter. These attractive, drought-tolerant plants are popular with gardeners who want to add an element of whimsy to their landscapes.
Native Plant of the Month: Coffeeberry
Coffeeberry (Frangula californica) is the native plant gardener’s best friend, and a constant companion to our local oaks! Though its understated appearance might not grab your attention right away, the coffeeberry’s subtle elegance, forgiving nature, and high value to pollinators will be sure to win you over.
Native Plant of the Month: Bushmallow
Bushmallows are a diverse and underappreciated group of shrubs with stunning, pink blooms and soft, fuzzy leaves. Our local arcuate bushmallow (Malacothamnus arcuatus var. arcuatus) is only found in the Santa Cruz mountains and is a great option for sunny spots in the garden.
Native Plant of the Month: California Native Bunchgrasses
California bunchgrasses provide beauty and habitat long after invasive annual grasses have died off, and their deep roots make them drought-tolerant and great for increasing soil health and carbon storage. Now there’s some grassroots power!
Native Plant of the Month: Yerba Buena
Yerba buena (Clinopodium douglasii) is a dainty, bright green native mint commonly found crawling along the forest floors of the Bay Area. In the garden it forms a lush groundcover, and it can be used to make tea or to season food. Yerba buena is available at our Native Plant Nursery. Learn more about this deliciously fragrant plant and how to grow it:
May Native Plant of the Month: Blackcap Raspberry
Did you know that we have a native species of raspberry right here in the Bay Area? Blackcap raspberry (Rubus leucodermis) is found in the Santa Cruz Mountains and produces delicious black raspberries in the summer. Blackcap raspberries are available at our Native Plant Nursery. Learn more about raspberries and how to grow them.
April Native Plant of the Month: California Buttercup
Every spring, California buttercup blooms across the grasslands, oak forests, and along creeks of the Bay Area. These brilliant, yellow flowers re-emerge after the rain and provide an early food source for native bees, ants, and butterflies. They are sure to add a pop of color to a sunny meadow or semi-shaded woodland garden.
Native Plant of the Month: Strawberry
Two native strawberries grow in the Bay Area: woodland strawberry (Fragaria vesca) and beach strawberry (Fragaria chiloensis). Both are sprawling, deep green groundcovers that can fill in bare zones around shrubs or even serve as lawn replacements for areas with moderate foot traffic. They also produce small fruits in late spring!