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Southern Cal Native Plant Gardening
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Добавлен 11 май 2018
Hi, I'm Rob Briggs and these are the adventures of a California native plant gardener.
We're located.in the Fullerton hills in northern Orange County about 20 miles from the Pacific Coast. In 2015 we moved to our new home and the following year we planted a native plant garden. It’s beginning to show results and I'm passionate about sharing its beauty with others.
My many playlists collect great videos on native plants (including nature gardens, butterfly gardens, and habitat or wildlife gardens) from around the country while my videos focus more on what's happening in our own garden. I hope you enjoy and feel free to comment and share experiences!
Rob Briggs, Fullerton, California
We're located.in the Fullerton hills in northern Orange County about 20 miles from the Pacific Coast. In 2015 we moved to our new home and the following year we planted a native plant garden. It’s beginning to show results and I'm passionate about sharing its beauty with others.
My many playlists collect great videos on native plants (including nature gardens, butterfly gardens, and habitat or wildlife gardens) from around the country while my videos focus more on what's happening in our own garden. I hope you enjoy and feel free to comment and share experiences!
Rob Briggs, Fullerton, California
Verbena 'De La Mina': Butterfly Magnet
Lilac Verbena (Verbena liliciana) & its cultivar Verbena 'De La Mina' are superior butterfly attracting plants for Southern California gardens. Over a few weeks I spotted a Mournful Duskywing, Skipper, Red Admiral, Tiger Swallowtail, plus, of course, many bees on the blooms of the Verbena 'De La Mina'!
Просмотров: 203
Видео
Brandegee Sage:Early Bloomer! SoCalNPG #shorts 3
Просмотров 23410 месяцев назад
#short 3 - Brandegee sage from the Channel Islands is an early blooming sage which adds some much needed color to your wintertime garden. It reliably blooms in the early months of the year, earlier than just about anything else in my garden.
Blue eyed Grass: A Favorite California Native #shorts 2
Просмотров 288Год назад
#shorts about Blue-eyed Grass, another one of my favorite California native plants for my native plant garden. Beautiful from mid-winter to mid-spring (in my microclimate), it is a cheerful addition to any native plant garden. Full sun to part-shade, it is adaptable to different soil types. From Southern California Native Plant Gardening
Toyon: A Favorite California Native SoCalNPG #shorts 1
Просмотров 208Год назад
#shorts about Toyon, one of my favorite California native plants for my native plant garden. Fast growing, reliable and adaptable to many different soil types. From Southern California Native Plant Gardening
Winter & Spring in Cal Native Plant Garden (in a year of drought)
Просмотров 1,9 тыс.2 года назад
Here are the flowering plants from late winter through mid-spring (Feb.-May 2022) in my southern California native plant garden. This period has been the driest first quarter on record in SoCal. And some of my annual wildflowers suffered because of it. But as you will see, there were still many beautiful flowering things to enjoy.
Garden Flowers for a Mother's Day Bouquet (in a severe drought)
Просмотров 2162 года назад
We collected native perennial and annual wildflowers from among our California native plants for a Mother's Day bouquet. Cari Senour Briggs produced two beautiful bouquets of wildflowers, which was all the more impressive because of the severe drought we are suffering from. Many California wildflowers are quite drought tolerant. Here is the list of the plants in the two bouquets: Salvia clevela...
Red-tailed Hawk-Another Moment of Grace-SoCalNPG-Ep.48
Просмотров 1702 года назад
This video shows the amazing encounter I just had on May 2, 2022, with a Red-tailed hawk in my backyard. My wife saw her first in our olive tree where she was riling up the scrub jays and mockingbirds. We frequently see Red-tailed hawks from our home in the Fullerton hills, but almost always from a considerable distance. This encounter was nearly close enough to reach out and touch it. Several ...
Butterfly Host Plants: Mustards & Sara Orangetips-SoCalNPG-Ep.47
Просмотров 4462 года назад
This video from our outing to the nearby regional park introduces the Sara Orangetip butterfly and its host plants, which are native and nonnative mustards. Part of a series on butterfly gardening, it shows how to attract butterflies to your native garden by planting butterfly nectar and host plants. For the Sara Orangetip a variety of California native plants with small to medium sized flowers...
Butterfly Host Plants: Mallows (and More!) for Painted Ladies-SoCalNPG-Ep.46
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.2 года назад
This virtual tour is of the Painted Lady butterflies that visits our California native plant garden every spring during their annual migration north. Part of a series on butterfly gardening, it shows how to attract butterflies to your native garden by planting butterfly nectar and host plants. The Painted Lady uses a variety of nectar and food plants, including mallows, thistles, lupines, buckw...
2021 Native Plant Garden: The Year in Review-SoCalNPG-Ep.45
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.3 года назад
This is a virtual tour of our California native plant garden during 2021. It shows the procession of flower blossoms through all four seasons. It includes examples of manzanita, ceanothus, strawberry tree, California buckwheat, Mexican bush sage, globemallow, and annual wildflowers. Its also features butterflies like Cloudless Sulphur, Dainty Sulphur and their host plants or food plants. Plus p...
A November Walkabout in our Native Plant Garden--SoCalNPG--Ep.44
Просмотров 7963 года назад
For sure fewer plants blossom in November than in April. But there still are a surprising number of blossoming flowers in fall. In this brief walkabout you'll get a virtual tour of our California native plant garden in early November. Included are senna (with Cloudless Sulphur butterflies & caterpillars), passion vine (with Gulf Fritillary butterflies & caterpillars), Damianita daisies (with a ...
Butterfly Host Plants: Cabbage & Cabbage White Butterflies-SoCalNPG ep. 42
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.3 года назад
This is about the Cabbage White butterfly and its host or food plants, cabbage and broccoli. It is from our California native plant garden. Part of a series on butterfly gardening, it shows how to attract butterflies to your garden by planting butterfly host plants. You will greatly increase your chances of attracting butterflies to your garden if you plant butterfly food plants. Butterflies wi...
Springtime Virtual Tour of our California Native Plant Garden, April thru June--SoCalNPG Ep. 43
Просмотров 12 тыс.3 года назад
This is a virtual tour of our California native plant garden in spring 2021. It shows the progression of flowering plants throughout spring. It also shows how all the spring blooms attract pollinators to our garden. California native plants include agave, autumn sage, Blackfoot daisies, blue-eyed grass, California coast sunflower, California poppies, Ceanothus Concha, Ceanothus Ray Hartman, Cle...
Great Egret: Unlikely Predator in Suburban Orange County-SoCalNPG-Ep. 41
Просмотров 1683 года назад
The video is of a great white egret hunting lizards in the suburbs of Fullerton, Orange County, California. They fly in from the Santa Ana River basin, I assume, to hunt for lizards and snakes among the suburban homes. The egret flies up the street, walks up the hill opposite our home, slowly stalks its prey, then strikes what is it? Slowly you see that he has speared a lizard. It gulps it down...
Butterfly Host Plants: Asters, etc & Dainty Sulphur Butterflies--SoCalNPG--Ep. 40
Просмотров 4053 года назад
This virtual tour is about the Dainty Sulphur butterfly and its host plants, asters and members of the sunflower family, including Damianita daisy. In my garden, this is what the female butterfly laid her eggs on. Part of a series on butterfly gardening, it shows how to attract butterflies to your native garden by planting butterfly host plants. You greatly increase your chances of attracting b...
Grow California Wildflowers! -- SoCalNPG Ep. 39
Просмотров 3,1 тыс.3 года назад
Grow California Wildflowers! SoCalNPG Ep. 39
Butterfly Host Plants: Nettles and Red Admiral Butterflies--SoCalNPG Ep. 38
Просмотров 2 тыс.3 года назад
Butterfly Host Plants: Nettles and Red Admiral Butterflies SoCalNPG Ep. 38
Using California Native Flowers for Mother's Day Bouquet--SoCalNPG Ep.37
Просмотров 2763 года назад
Using California Native Flowers for Mother's Day Bouquet SoCalNPG Ep.37
Early Bloomers: California Native Plants Blooming in Winter -- Ep. 36
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.3 года назад
Early Bloomers: California Native Plants Blooming in Winter Ep. 36
Gardening on a Hot, Dry Slope: Big Problem or Opportunity?--SoCalNPG--Ep. 35
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.4 года назад
Gardening on a Hot, Dry Slope: Big Problem or Opportunity? SoCalNPG Ep. 35
Butterfly Host Plants: Legumes & Marine Blues--SoCalNPG--Ep.34
Просмотров 4324 года назад
Butterfly Host Plants: Legumes & Marine Blues SoCalNPG Ep.34
How to Remove Raccoons & Skunks From Suburban Gardens--SoCalNPG--Ep.33
Просмотров 954 года назад
How to Remove Raccoons & Skunks From Suburban Gardens SoCalNPG Ep.33
In the California Garden, Is It Fall, or the Fifth Season?--SoCalNPG--Ep.32
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.4 года назад
In the California Garden, Is It Fall, or the Fifth Season? SoCalNPG Ep.32
Intro to Backyard Butterflies - SoCalNPG - Ep.31
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.4 года назад
Intro to Backyard Butterflies - SoCalNPG - Ep.31
May Day in our California Native Garden (in the time of Coronavirus)-SoCalNPG-Ep.30
Просмотров 1,9 тыс.4 года назад
May Day in our California Native Garden (in the time of Coronavirus)-SoCalNPG-Ep.30
Springtime Native Gardens in the Time of Coronavirus - SoCalNPG - Ep. 29
Просмотров 2624 года назад
Springtime Native Gardens in the Time of Coronavirus - SoCalNPG - Ep. 29
How to Do Live Bee Removal -- Update: Now with Bee Sting Footage!
Просмотров 594 года назад
How to Do Live Bee Removal Update: Now with Bee Sting Footage!
The Life Cycle of Cloudless Sulphur Butterflies -- SoCalNPG -- Ep.28
Просмотров 8 тыс.5 лет назад
The Life Cycle of Cloudless Sulphur Butterflies SoCalNPG Ep.28
Butterfly Host Plants: Milkweed & Monarchs -- SoCalNPG -- Ep.27
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.5 лет назад
Butterfly Host Plants: Milkweed & Monarchs SoCalNPG Ep.27
Butterfly Host Plants: Oaks & Mournful Duskywings -- SoCalNPG -- Ep.26
Просмотров 1805 лет назад
Butterfly Host Plants: Oaks & Mournful Duskywings SoCalNPG Ep.26
Instructive video - thanks .
Thank you for this excellent video! Clear, concise, well organized and spoken. I'll be in So Cal in late January from zone 10A in FL and eager to see CA pollinators, their hosts, and their food.
love your video but I wish you would give zones
BEAUTIFUL, patient work. Thank you!!
Thank you kindly.
I see them every year in my garden in Ohio. I'm just a couple of miles from Lake Erie.
I like what you have to say but would be better if you could talk a little faster
Thanks for the feedback.
I saw one today in Washington state, and it was eating some of the overripe figs on my fig tree. It really flits around!
Did you live in Pleasant Hill? Also, they seem to like my Borage plants- in the NW
No. In Fullerton, Orange County, in So. Calif.
Great video! Probably I missed some information. My son growing these butterflies from caterpillar to butterfly. We have passion vines at home (inside). Caterpillars look happy with that. But when they come out we try to feed them with sugar water, pineapple, orange, and banana. They just became weak after 3-4 days, stopped flying and ..... This happened with just two of them for now. At this moment we have 5 chrysalises and 6 small caterpillars. How do we have to feed them and on what day release them? Thank you so much in advance.
Beautiful! Thanks for the tour!
Thanks for watching!
No need to take out grass. Instead smother it with cardboard and mulch that you can get for free from arborist. this method is called lasagna gardening. The grass becomes excellent soil and the mulch is there for your new drought tolerant plants.
Thanks for the comment!
Well done!
Thanks. Glad you enjoyed it!
Absolutely stunning!
Thanks. And this year has been pretty good for wildflowers, with winter/spring being wetter & cooler than usual.
I love your video. Great information about the plants and wonderful to see the wildlife visiting your garden.
Thank you kindly for visiting my site and leaving a comment. Much appreciated! And good luck with your gardening!
Ran across one of these today. Was very friendly and sat all over me. Sat on my hand, my shorts and my feet. I have some nettle plants in my yard, but not stinging nettle.
I saw one in my yard a week or two ago, but not so friendly that it would sit on my hand! In what part of the country do you live?
@@southerncalnativeplantgard3777 Texas
I’m not far from you, where do you go to get your natives? Thanks.
Hi. My first choice is Tree of Life Nursery in San Juan Capistrano because they're open Monday through Saturday & they have the largest selection of California natives, possibly in the whole state. Second, Grow Native Nursery at the California Botanic Garden in Claremont. In spring it is open Friday through Sunday & they have a good selection. It's probably not as large as Tree of Life's, but they do carry some items that Tree of Life does not. Third, Fullerton Arboretum has occasional native plant sales. Their prices are competitive with Tree of Life and Grow Native Nursery, but their sales are only held two or three times a year. Fourth, the local Armstrong Nursery in Fullerton has a small but growing selection of California native plants. The advantage is they are close and convenient. The disadvantage is their selection is limited & their prices are higher than any of the other nurseries. I hope this helps.
Love the video! A great resource for my lawn transformation. If I could suggest adding the common name to the text for screen shot purposes? I see it in the description but the picture gets darkened.
Good suggestion. I'll try to incorporate it in the future. Thanks for visiting!
thank you. I finally found videos in Calif. I am zone 9 San Diego so thank you
Thanks and good luck!
Do you know if passiflora amythest is one of the passion vines that they do not like? I newly planted one of them, and it seems like there are no caterpillars on it compared to my other variety which has tons of caterpillars. They are laying eggs on the amythest, but i can’t find any caterpillars. Since i got it from lowes, i am also wondering if it was sprayed with pesticides. Thx.
By the scientific botanical name, I don't know which varieties attract gulf fritillaries and which don't. But if it doesn't have caterpillars AND there is no evidence that the leaves have been "munched" on, I would say that it is a variety that does not attract gulf fritillaries.
A beautiful garden, subscribed!
Thank you!
I am very disappointed that you list Pride of Madeira as a plant to attract butterflies considering it's invasive in California. I work in habitat restoration and have spent months removing Pride of Madeira from local habitats. I expected so much more from a group calling itself a Southern Cal Native Plant Gardening.
Thank you for this informative video. Saw one of these fliting around and wondered what it was. With help frim Google Search and your video i do!
Glad it helped!
We sure did enjoy watching! thank you!
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it!
That second white flower at 7:44 looks like a honeysuckle and the peachy pink one next to it reminds me of penstemon. Thank you for the video.
Thanks for commenting.
Wow! You have a beautiful garden. I am just getting started on mine.
Thank you kindly. Good luck with yours!
If you are not familiar with Carbon Canyon Regional Park everyone should check out the butterfly garden there. Go to the far east end of the parking lot, no long hike required. This morning I saw a party of cabbage whites, perhaps 15-20 of them. They were crazy for the electric blue sage. I figure that their host plant must be the mustard plants in the park.
Thanks for the suggestion. We have been there to walk the nature trail over to the redwood groves, but I haven't been there recently. I'll have to check it out.
Thank you! Nicely done video. I live in San Gabriel and our school garden beds are made up of decomposed granite. Great to know what native flowers will grow in it.
Yes, I am always a little surprised to see what will grow in the decomposed granite but the wildflowers are well adapted to it.
That was great. Thanks for posting.
My pleasure, thanks for visiting.
Very nice video Can you share what best source to get wild flower seed and what best time to plant them? I am also live in Southern California in upland thank you
Down south in San Juan Capistrano is Tree of Life Nursery, in Claremont is Grown Native Nursery, & in the San Fernando Valley is Theodore Payne Nursery. Many other nurseries sell generic wildflower seed but these three (& probably other nurseries that specialize in California native plants) have quality California wildflower seed so you know you're getting seed for California wildflowers. They have packets of several different seed mixes or seeds of individual wildflowers such as, for example, California poppies. Now, (late fall) is a good time to plant wildflower seed. Other good times are in late winter to early spring. So good luck!
Thank you for teaching us more about native plants and wildlife in So Cal. You explain things well.
Well, thank you very kindly.
how do you prune? Does this grow over other natives? I'm hoping to keep it managed so other native plants can grow next to it
Blue-eyed grass blossoms late winter through spring. By the end of spring it is dying back. It will either die back to dry leaves and stalks, or some varieties simply disappear. So pruning per se isn't necessary, but you may want to remove the dead stalks and, in the process, save some of the dry seed for replanting in the fall.
If you build it they will come is a Mandela effect (look it up on here) Everyone remembers that line,but now it says If you build it HE will come. Freaky stuff
Scarlet Flax looks great with that white alyssum. Texas Sage is a great plant
Thank you I am a beginner gardener I am trying to incorporate native plants into my garden Your video is very helpful Thanks for sharing
I'm glad they're of some help to you. Good luck!
Greetings from Arizona zone 9B. We are growing a passion fruit in our backyard Vineyard and have noticed yellow butterflies. We will watch out for this one! Cheers 😎👍
Yellow butterflies or orange butterflies? If it is a medium sized yellow butterfly, it sounds like it's in the sulphur family. A medium sized orange butterfly would be a gulf fritillary, and it would be attracted to the passion fruit or passion vine. The numerous cloudless sulphur butterflies in my backyard are attracted to cassia or senna. Having said all that, I have to admit that I know very little about the types of butterflies found around in AZ and how they are distributed. But I suspect that most common butterflies are found in both Arizona and Southern California. Good luck!
Any idea how to design a landscape around a wild flower mix?
Do you have an established garden or is it bare ground, or something in between? The wildflower mix, how many different types of wildflower seed does it have? When we redid our front yard 7 years ago we started with a lot of different types & sizes of perennials. Then we added wildflower starts & seeds among the perennials & at the front of borders (because wildflowers are typically shorter & look best at the front of borders.) So I used the wildflowers as filler for spring color. Then each year in fall or early spring I've added more wildflower seed. There are some wildflowers that are perennial & have a long bloom season. But most are annuals, blooming in spring but dying back in the heat of summer. So these annuals look spectacular in springtime but don't "show" well in the other seasons. That's how it has been in my garden. I'm only 30-30 miles from the coast but still our summers, especially August & September, are quite hot. I hope this helps. If you find something that works well, please let me know.
@@southerncalnativeplantgard3777 I have a box of mixed seeds that says butterfly mix and the other box is for birds. Right now my lawn is dead and the edible plant that took over is considered a weed. The seeds screw into the ground. So it needs to be weeded. I like your filler idea!
One thing you might try is this: Cover all of the dead grass with layers of newspaper. Over the newspaper, put down a layer of bark mulch. The newspaper will suppress both the lawn and the weeds. The bark mulch will hold the newspaper in place, while making a better appearance. Decide where to make paths & open areas & where you want to locate your flowerbeds. Put short perennials at the front of the beds, medium sized in the middle, and taller plants toward the back. To plant them, dig holes through the newspaper, plant the perennials and water them in well. Toward the front of the beds & in between the perennials, dig various pockets and plant your wildflower seed in them. To make sure the seed germinates, water the wildflower pockets every day & sometimes twice a day when it's hot. If you don't, the wildflower seed won't germinate. This is just a sketch of this technique, but you can find RUclips videos showing you step-by-step how to do it. It might be better to start this project in October. Your plants will probably have a better survival rate if planted in the fall. But it might be possible to do now before the summer heat really hits in July. Personally, I'd probably wait till October. You can plant the wildflower seed then. It will be well watered over the winter & the wildflowers will bloom next spring. Good luck with whatever you decide!
To clarify, you may want to wait until fall to plant. But it would be a good idea to put down newspaper and bark mulch right now. That way it will completely kill off all the grass and weeds so you will have less problem with weeds when you plant in the fall.
That's it!! I was wondering what this plant is that I have, it's Sweet Alyssum, Lobularia maritima (L.) Desv. Thanks for the clue! Unfortunately, this one seems to be listed as a SoCal invasive species. Now I'll have to think this plant over, again. Thanks all the same!!
You are right. I can't even remember whether it was my wife or I who planted the sweet alyssum about eight years ago in one spot by the southeast patio. It stayed put there for a few years but this year, especially with all the rain, it has started to migrate to the south and the east, and if I would let it, It would try to spread into our meadow at the front (north) of our property. Fortunately, it is fairly easy to remove but still, I can confirm its invasive properties.
awesome
Awesome video!
Thanks much!
Great video. Good info. Thanks for the tips. 😁
You're welcome. With all the rain we've had recently this coming spring looks like it might be a great year for wildflowers. That's the way it was the last time we had lots of rain-- we had a bumper crop of wildflowers. I haven't planted any new seed yet, but if this rain will stop for a while, I'll plant something in the next couple of weeks.
Thanks for sharing!
God bless yo all the people that doesnt only think about having🌵☀️ our gardens but Also taking care of d enveriment..I wish in Tijuana More people would care about this issue🌴☹️
Thank you!
Beautiful. Where can you purchase California native plants?
For Southern California, Tree of Life Nursery in San Juan Capistrano has a great selection and helpful staff. Grown Native Nursery in Claremont also has a good selection but they're closed in the summertime and will reopen in October. Theodore Payne Foundation in the San Fernando Valley, like Tree of Life, has a very good selection and helpful staff. You might also check your local Armstrong Nursery. Mine has a buyer who is a native plant enthusiast and therefore they offer a selective amount of native plants. But I am not sure that's true at all locations. It's usually a good idea to wait until mid October or November to begin planting natives (unless it's a desert plant avoid planting in summertime). Good luck!
@@southerncalnativeplantgard3777 thank you
I watched one laying eggs on Rose of Sharon in my yard. I've seen up to 3 at once this year so far. They say they are rarely seen more than one or two on a butterfly count.
Love your videos. I moved here after fifty years in Minnesota and all the plants here just amaze me.
Would love to hear how you first established and maintain wooly blue curl. I want to try this plant, but am a but intimidated
They have a reputation of not responding well to too much summer water. I planted mine on a gentle slope (so water does not pond) and the location is equal parts sun and shade. Mine seem to do very well in that location. They've been there for 4-5 years and so far they are tolerating my summer water regime. There is a cultivar that is supposed to be more garden friendly and not quite so temperamental about watering. You might look for that one. I have planted some of that which has been in the ground less than a year. So far so good.
@@southerncalnativeplantgard3777 Thank you so much! My entire front yard slopes gently toward the street. Not so great for getting out if the car on the sloping driveway, but I hope it will work for wooly blue curls. It is all on drip irrigation, so I should be able to control the water. I think I know the cultivar you are talking about and a couple sources. Thanks again!
Nymphalis antiopa will also feed on various Ulmus spp. ( And yes I have also noted Nymphalis antiopa male chasing a Papilio rumiko.)
I'm trying to figure out the difference, at a VERY quick glance, between a Sulphur Butterfly and a California Dogface. I may have both in my garden, but what I think is a Dogface never sits still and never rests with open wings. I see the sulphurs chasing each other like you say, but the Dogface is alone, and very colorful yellow with orange notes.
I check my butterfly book and the male dogwood is very distinctive above and completely different from the cloudless sulfur. But like you say, it hardly ever lands with its wings open and so you hardly ever see the distinctive upper wings. I've never noticed the California Dogwood in my backyard or area. They may be here, but I haven't seen them. I suspect you are right: you probably have two different butterflies but when the underside of the wings is all you see, they're very difficult to identify or tell apart.
That is a fantastic video! I'm also from Fullerton and have been converting my yard from old-school grass landscape to a drought-tolerant garden bit by bit as I gain knowledge over time. This was very helpful. Thank you so much.
Glad you enjoyed it. It's worth it to make the change. Good luck with all future projects!
I am learning so much about California natives, your garden is a dream. May I suggest you slow the camera down so that we can see the flowers and learn what they look like. thank you.
Very good suggestion. I'll try to do it.