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CNPS-San Diego
Добавлен 15 апр 2020
The California Native Plant Society is a statewide nonprofit organization seeking to increase understanding and appreciation of California's native plants and to preserve them in their natural habitat through scientific activities, education, conservation, and restoration.
The San Diego Chapter (CNPSSD) serves San Diego and Imperial counties. We invite you to come to our meetings and field trips, learn more about the flora of our state, and meet people who share your interest in native plants.
The San Diego Chapter (CNPSSD) serves San Diego and Imperial counties. We invite you to come to our meetings and field trips, learn more about the flora of our state, and meet people who share your interest in native plants.
CNPSSD Native Garden Committee Zoom Webinar - Desert Plants for the Urban Garden With Don Rideout
You don’t have to live in the desert to enjoy gardening with desert plants. Don Rideout will guide you in discovering the beauty and diversity of desert plants that thrive in urban gardens. He will share tips on selecting the best desert plants for your environment and offer practical advice on how to care for them, ensuring your garden flourishes with the unique charm of desert flora.
Don Rideout began gardening with native plants in 1995 and some of those plants still survive today. Ten years ago, Don completely renovated his garden, creating five habitat zones adding plants representing each habitat. He volunteers with Batiquitos Lagoon and Anza-Borrego State Park. Don graciously opened...
Don Rideout began gardening with native plants in 1995 and some of those plants still survive today. Ten years ago, Don completely renovated his garden, creating five habitat zones adding plants representing each habitat. He volunteers with Batiquitos Lagoon and Anza-Borrego State Park. Don graciously opened...
Просмотров: 188
Видео
7.16.24 CNPSSD Chapter Meeting
Просмотров 1794 месяца назад
Dr. Jo'lene Saldivar Presentation on Post-Fire Butterfly-Plant Community Recovery Publications mentioned in Presentation: Ecosphere - esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ecs2.4810 Oxford Academic - academic.oup.com/ee/article/51/6/1141/6731819 Entomological Society of America - esa.confex.com/esa/2021eb/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/154128
CNPSSD NGC Presents: “YARD SMARTS: TRANSFORMING LANDSCAPES WITH CALSCAPE KNOW-HOW”
Просмотров 1545 месяцев назад
WITH ANNE-MARIE BENZ, CNPS STEWARDSHIP PROGRAMS MANAGER Zoom recorded 7.9.2024 Discover how the new Calscape redesign (calscape.org) can revolutionize your outdoor space by helping you find the perfect native plants, innovative design ideas, and skilled landscape professionals. This talk will delve into the smart tools and resources Calscape offers, empowering you to create a stunning, sustaina...
NGC Meeting Barbara Chung March 14 2023
Просмотров 288Год назад
Barbara Chung shares stories about her native plant container garden, a small patio that is home to over 200 plants and a mini-nursery that yielded another 400 plants last year.
Planting the Answer
Просмотров 270Год назад
This short documentary was produced by Alara Jones, a filmmaker in San Diego with a BA in Film Production from Montana State. It was made possible through an internship with the Workforce Development Initiative, which is funded by the city of San Diego. Here is what Alara Jones said about the project: “In my research to find an environmental issue or program that I am passionate about, I found ...
Lucy Warren: Gardens of Balboa Park
Просмотров 312Год назад
While the majority of local residents have visited the Zoo and the museums in the Central Mesa of Balboa Park, most have not explored much farther to discover the many hidden treasures of this incredible legacy. Larger than Central Park, Balboa Park has a fascinating history and many wonderful nooks and crannies. As a neighbor of this wonderful park, Lucy Warren leads a visual tour of gardens a...
NGC Fire Resistant Native Landscape is not an Oxymoron! with Greg Rubin
Просмотров 7952 года назад
Greg Rubin's company, California’s Own Native Landscape Design, has been responsible for nearly two dozen native landscapes that have been involved in major fire events, without the loss of a single home. This talk will explore the basic principles of creating a native landscape that is appealing throughout the year, consumes less water, is lower maintenance, is unequaled for erosion control, s...
Bee-ing a Better Gardener: Using Research to Support Native Bees in the Garden
Просмотров 4972 года назад
Dr. Christine Casey, an entomologist at UC-Davis, reviews the biology and identification of common California native bees in gardens, and also look at recent research in California and elsewhere that has identified important plants and design features to include in bee-supporting gardens.
Cultivating Your Inner Scientist
Просмотров 2482 года назад
Environmental scientist Renee Murphy leads a discussion on building sustainable native habitats by observing details within your space. Preparation will guide you to a successful and fulfilling growing experience. Through community and education, we will learn together. As a native plant educator, Renee shares her passion for sustainable gardening and restoration and hopes to inspire others to ...
New Plants and Innovations in Native Landscaping with Greg Rubin
Просмотров 3 тыс.2 года назад
Author and native plant landscape designer Greg Rubin talks about what’s new in California native gardening - from new technologies & new native plants to new ways to treat pathogens.
Manzanitas-The Beauty and Complexity of Evolution
Просмотров 4,4 тыс.3 года назад
Speaker: Tom Parker, Professor of Biology at SF State University since 1980, now Emeritus. DESCRIPTION: California has nearly a hundred different species and subspecies of Arctostaphylos (manzanitas). This talk will attempt a few things to provide a context for this diversity. First we’ll examine their origin in the ericaceous subfamily Arbutoideae, an early diverging group of the Ericaceae nam...
San Diego Insects and their Dependence on Native Plants
Просмотров 7353 года назад
Dr Daniel Marschalek (University of Central Missouri) talks about several threatened and endangered butterflies (Hermes copper, dun skipper) which are specific to one or a few plant species as a larval food source in the San Diego area. Recovery efforts are underway and often focus on the native plants upon which they feed. Recent research has also demonstrated that native shrublands in coastal...
A Natural History of the Anza Borrego Region with Michael Wells
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.3 года назад
SPEAKER: Michael L. Wells Ph.D. DESCRIPTION The recently published, A Natural History of the Anza-Borrego Region Then and Now by Mike Wells and Marie Simovich, evolved from a course taught at the University of San Diego by the authors over a 16-year period. It tells the story of how the desert landscape evolved over time and how the organisms that inhabit the desert have adapted to the conditio...
Regenerative Landscapes and Climate Adaptation with Studio Petrichor
Просмотров 7663 года назад
Shawn Maestretti, Landscape Architect and Principal of Studio Petrichor Leigh Adams, Studio Petrichor Consultant and Educator Shawn & Leigh discuss hugelkultur and more. Embracing real-life solutions, accessible to homeowners, garden enthusiasts, communities, municipalities, and landscape professionals, this timely and informative presentation immediately engages the audience to provide a bluep...
A Garden in Five Parts with Don Rideout
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.3 года назад
Native plant gardener Don Rideout will present a virtual tour of his garden that is arranged in five sections representing different geographic and habitat zones of Southern California- Baja, San Diego Chaparral, Channel Islands, Pond, and Shade.
A New Era of Plant Conservation at the San Diego Botanic Garden with Jon Rebman
Просмотров 8663 года назад
A New Era of Plant Conservation at the San Diego Botanic Garden with Jon Rebman
Live Interview with Garden Owner Judie Lincer
Просмотров 8003 года назад
Live Interview with Garden Owner Judie Lincer
Using "Coast to Cactus" as a Field Guide to the San Diego Outdoors with Jim Varnell & Diana Lindsay
Просмотров 2073 года назад
Using "Coast to Cactus" as a Field Guide to the San Diego Outdoors with Jim Varnell & Diana Lindsay
Native Milkweed & Monarch Conservation: Developing a San Diego Milkweed Source for the Public Market
Просмотров 1 тыс.3 года назад
Native Milkweed & Monarch Conservation: Developing a San Diego Milkweed Source for the Public Market
As Above, So Below - What Our Gardens Say About Who We Are, and Where We Are Headed w/David Newsom
Просмотров 9173 года назад
As Above, So Below - What Our Gardens Say About Who We Are, and Where We Are Headed w/David Newsom
Lawn to California Native Garden with Maya Argaman
Просмотров 10 тыс.3 года назад
Lawn to California Native Garden with Maya Argaman
Plant Rediscoveries in Baja California and Discoveries in San Diego with Jon Rebman
Просмотров 9123 года назад
Plant Rediscoveries in Baja California and Discoveries in San Diego with Jon Rebman
The Oaks of San Diego County with Fred Roberts
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.4 года назад
The Oaks of San Diego County with Fred Roberts
Beauty and the Beast: California Wildflowers and Climate Change with Rob Badger & Nita Winter
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.4 года назад
Beauty and the Beast: California Wildflowers and Climate Change with Rob Badger & Nita Winter
Dudleya Conservation-In Vitro Propagation to Combat Plant Poaching and Extinction with Kevin Alison
Просмотров 1 тыс.4 года назад
Dudleya Conservation-In Vitro Propagation to Combat Plant Poaching and Extinction with Kevin Alison
Garden Profile: Hei-ock Kim, San Diego
Просмотров 4794 года назад
Garden Profile: Hei-ock Kim, San Diego
great video thank you!
UNBELIEVABLE GARDEN WOW!!!
Dr. Tom Dykstra would be a good connection to further the work on Argentinian ants ruclips.net/video/w7BMVlCjQQE/видео.htmlsi=C28K_oNWiWV7deat
colibrí is hummingbird in spanish. chuparosa is rose sucker. Here in Texss we have insectos and small finches we call chuparosa.
I would also like to see what the plant looks like all through the year. Some look pretty raggedy and need to be put in the background. It's best not to be surprised!
Thank you for posting this recording. Very interesting and informative!
oaks are awesome
Thanks for this presentation! I’m in WA state and would love to look into something like this for rare, highly poached species up here. 💚
It belongs to George Lucas now
This is an Interesting topic. Seems to be a great use of a greenhouse to help conserve the Dudleya. ❤
Need more videos !!
i have a question i'd love an answer to. i understand the evolutionary advantage of stony endocarps, but what is the advantage of seeds which fuse? don't you just end up with a lot less seed overall?
Are you using diatomaceous earth to kill ants?
Sometimes, but I prefer to do the treatment as listed in the link in the comments below.
Those flowers smell so so good!
Taken a very similar journey the last few years, we have so many great species that bring in so much wildlife. Awesome video.
Well, in Riverside County the Engelmannii thrive on the Santa Rosa Plateau above Temecula and Murietta. Also a bog population on Cahuilla Mountain. Not sure about Redlands since it is so built up with human infrastructure. Perhaps in urban landscapes. They most likely are also throughout the Santa Ana Mountains.
Wow, publish Agust 2021 and this is all the interest this subject has generated ??? I always have a tough time with the dating promoted in these docs. Frankly I can take it or leave it and always have to take things with a grain of salt to make them more paletable and maybe even believable. I don't doubt the materials which make up our Universe have been around for milions or even billions of years. But to say that some creatures or artifacts are assumed to be millions of years old because of the materials they are discovered in to me is a stretch. Can some geological materials be millios of years old ??? Sure, but that doesn't tell e when the creature or footprint made in the mud material was millions or 100 years old. Much of science now is about spinning narratives to fit a worldview. The days of discovery and wonder have been long gone. for more than a century. People forget that most of these modern day crisis have been brought to us by Science and Scientists. Industrial Revolution, Various wars, climate change, Covid, the pseudo-scientific Green Revolution, etc. I guess i just have to get through the fluff and wade thru mysticism and be pateint until the modern factsarrive to reveal the real story of what life and how it survives comes to light in the video. I wish more truth about the native Americans and their role in the decline of the MegaFauna would be told. I watched a video put out by Sycuan Tribe about their Kumeyaay ancestors hunting prowess and how after they hunted in the beginning Mastodons and Gant Ground Sloths, these went extinct and their weapon of choice became the bow and arrow. What a thing to brag about. Does anyone realize that behaviour is generaly more associated with arrival of Europeans than with the indigenous ??? Why ???? Because Native are simply human beings equal to everyone else. And mankind as a whole are responsible for decline. Science has only helped humans to accelerated this process. Maybe I'll watch it later, but for now I have to stop at point 18:44. Sorry
You sound unhinged and psychotic. Please make sure to get help
Can we please get more videos like this?! I really enjoyed it.
Wow. Went to Mt. Tam yesterday and noted two different colors of manzanita seemingly alternating with each other, which is what led me to your video. Thank you for outright answering my question!!!
Rescued bees from leaves and rotten wood building first bee friendly ground level mulched courses across barren duff. These included flattened formations over former meadow with elevated fungal innoculated mounds. Am pleased with the results. The bees have thrived. They are diverse, docile and almost affectionate. They have no fear of my feet or shovel. With further mounds the wild bees seeded and propagated species all the way along. There are solitary pits dug in shared depressions, and increasing wood scrap offers other habitats.
Very good presentation - thank you! It was nice to be reminded of my friend the late Jeanine DeHart. I'm just getting started with planning a labyrinth using plants from Baja California and coastal California up to the Bay area - basically, all plants from the Pacific Tectonic Plate.
😌 ᑭᖇOᗰOᔕᗰ
Excellent talk. This is Doug Tallamy level.
Can I eat the fruit ?
yes you can. they're arent bad at all. manzanita= little apple in spanish which is an apt name
Great work thank you so much !!!!!
Wow I bow my head sir your work is amazing the beauty plants bring thank you !!!!!
This is awesome !!!!!!!
i just planted some asclepias fascicularis, abutilon palmeri, asclepias speciosa, and epilobium canum. i'm watering them every day till the end of the week, then, i'll let them be, no?
Great Talk Thank you. Tony, do you sell seeds @ SDBG?
I have had success with CA maiden hair ferns in bright indirect light in the bathroom. I had some luck with South facing windows for small native cactus as long as you give them a good sized pot with well drained cactus soil.
If local peoples can find where a "development" will (make required by city/county) and go in and transplant the natives to have available to homeowners. Also to have the "developer" show what was there before, pollinators, creatures, plants.
When planting consider soil type (if clay or sandy or loam, how much water need), size plant to grow to, how much sun in the spaces, if irrigation . After water soil, dig to see how far down the water soaked in.
Just got back from a trip to Todos Santos (vacation) and immediately came home to do some research on native plants in Baja bc I was fascinated, and curious as to what's been documented...feels like I hit the jackpot with this great lecture :)
Fine presentation fellow Leucadian!! Wonderful pics… From Janine at Weber nursery to now Torrey at Neel’s nursery, I’ll always try to get to that special species FIRST!!👨🏻🌾🌵
I have been searching for berberis pinnata for years and nowhere seems to sell it. I wish they would. It's beautiful!
What should one do if there are ants ruining a landscape?
Hi Jacob just happened to come across your comment today - here's a link to a write-up I did on Argentine ant behavior and treatment: www.cnpssd.org/s/General-statement-on-Ants-Rev-3-4-22.pdf
Ants don't ruin landscapes. Improper landscape practices cause sorts imbalances which prompt sucking insects to get out of balance (and some plant types are more prone to being attractive to / infested with sucking insects/),…. which cause 'the ants' to infest and mess up the situation more. It's the basic fundamentals of disease. Practices / materials used, cause the problem to arise, biologically.
@@bonsummers2657 so I'm late to the comments, but I can tell you that Linepithema humile (Argentine ants) nest in the ROOT balls of the plants, excavates soil, and plasters the upper root system with scale and root aphids. In that process they also directly inoculate pathogens into the root cambium. People often assume I must be overwatering landscapes, but I'm not. The truth is they can radiate out 200-300 meters from a moisture source, so if you have neighbors and/or moisture sources within that radius, then you will get ants. They are the main cause of mortality in Ceanothus, and native landscapes in general. I have developed a treatment and control program that has been extremely and repeatedly successful.
Here is a link to my paper on Argentine ants: chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/static1.squarespace.com/static/585dc42c725e25ca57806ffc/t/6223c4444999755208684002/1646511175393/General+statement+on+Ants+Rev.+3-4-22.pdf
Will Ants kill your Natives?
"Don't they say we're crazy" LOL my current situation.
I’m buying my first home ever in the county and this is great information
Just amazing, thank you for your hard work in covering and helping future generations. 🙌🤩🙏🌱
Great video and great yard! An inspiration for me (I’m just a few miles away in San Carlos). FYI - that Raptor calling at the end of the video was a Red-shouldered Hawk not a Coop :)
When do you have your plant sale.
We will have events in October and November. Be sure to get on our email list for notifications cnpssd.org/sign-up
What is the actual names of the native milkweed for San Diego!?!
The main species in San Diego County is Narrow-leaf Milkweed (Asclepias fascicularis). There are several other species of milkweed in the county with much more limited distribution. Of those inland and desert species, Kotolo Milkweed (Asclepias eriocarpa) would be the most commonly found.
Wow she has a gorgeous garden and back yard
Hi, Mary Duffy said that for the seed stratification process, they stuck the seeds in the refrigerator from anywhere to two to four months. But I have a question: So isn't that too much time for cold stratification? I am saying this because other people say that if the seeds stay in the refrigerator more than 6 weeks, the seeds will root or get harmed.
I meant to leave my milkweed CMS for two weeks. I accidentally went over and it has been 25. i just transfered to soil. I noticed there were maybe 3-4 out of 50 that were begnning to sprout.
@@jayocampo5413 what do you about cms?
@@fullmooninricky3965 oh ok thank you for replying!
Right on!
I have done this for two different yards over the last ten years...This is the best compehesive intro presentation i have viewed!!!!!🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻
Great to hear!
Whats the ground cover? Herniara?
Really excellent. David is a great ambassador for native plants and native habitats.
Couldn't agree more!
I was donated a back yard to start a Garden and plant Native plants I need some help on how to kill the existing grass
Here's an article that should be helpful: www.cnps.org/gardening/prepping-and-planting/grass-removal
Tons of videos here on you tube for that...... most use cardboard.