... Seaside goldenrod. (Solidago sempervirens) is also worth considering. It has large, bright yellow flower heads, and monarch butterflies feed on the nectar during their autumn migration. Farther inland, safe choices include Northern ...
... Solidago sempervirens farther back, but it seeded itself by the road," said Stein, beaming at the hefty 6- foot-wide stand of seaside goldenrod thriving at their home in Potomac, Md. "As far as I'm concerned, you can't have too much ...
... Seaside goldenrod (Solidago sempervirens) is also worth considering. It has large, bright yellow flower heads, and monarch butterflies feed on the nectar during their autumn migration. Farther inland, safe choices include Northern ...
... Seaside Goldenrod fS. sempervirens}, from Nova Scotia southward into Mexico, a mammoth sort, sometimes 8 feet tall, with large, open clusters of bloom; and European Goldenrod (S. vir- gaurea), in its dwarf, rock- garden variation ...
... Solidago semper- virens (seaside goldenrod). S. squamosa (rare). Arctostaphylos L'va-ursi (bear berry, Tory" pretty) ... sempervirens, S. rugosa, a fine specimen of Corniis paniculata. and a plant of Coraltorfiiza multiftora with a ...
... Solidago (so-li-DAY-go) species, grow in full sun and have a myriad of bright yellow, tubular flowers, mostly in the ... Seaside Goldenrod, S. sempervi- rens (beach dunes, salt marshes, wet pinelands; this is the one you most ...
... Solidago squar- - rosa, but it never appears at floral l election rajlies, although the "hairy y goldenrod" has been observed upon n platforms. And wo must not forgot t seaside goldenrod, bushy goldenrod, , sweet-scented goldenrod ...
... solidago rigida and s. sempervirens, terrific late summer butterfly and insect attractors. For the hummingbirds, I've planted two. tubular red-flowered perennials: Texas sage, salvia coccinea, and a Mexican wildflower, galvezia jun- cea ...
... seaside goldenrod (.Soli- dago sempervirens); an orchard, the trees of which had been buriod and dug out, and the like. Vegetation on the dunes themselves was very scarce, unless one excopts the delicate littlo Euphorbia so often seen ...