Botan/horticulturist but this is no professional account lol im a southern ⚦ who runs their mouth
personally Ⓥ (mostly welfarist), spec bio, rewilding+rematriation, supporter of responsible predator-friendly farming
Also I have heard that leaving straight hollow stems on salvia / similar borderline hardy plants can be problematic during freeze/thaw cycles (damage and rot plant), cannot verify though as I’ve only worked in the Deep South
Also I have heard that leaving straight hollow stems on salvia / similar borderline hardy plants can be problematic during freeze/thaw cycles (damage and rot plant), cannot verify though as I’ve only worked in the Deep South
I’ll do it right tho and put it in a swale 💪
I’ll do it right tho and put it in a swale 💪
- “cedar” elm (soil builder, fall color, host plant)
- sweet acacia/huisache (soil builder,perfect thin shade nursery tree)
- escarpment live oak (winter protection for broms)
- buckley oak (fall color)
- “cedar” elm (soil builder, fall color, host plant)
- sweet acacia/huisache (soil builder,perfect thin shade nursery tree)
- escarpment live oak (winter protection for broms)
- buckley oak (fall color)