Aromatic Aster - A Complete Profile

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  • Опубликовано: 22 окт 2024

Комментарии • 105

  • @mokong4427
    @mokong4427 7 месяцев назад +9

    Just started with gardening in our backyard. I am based and TX and the last2 years was crazy hot and we are in drought. I started researching about drought tolerant, native plants. That is when I found your channel. I have cone flower, coreopsis, bee balm , milkweed and now this germinating because I found it all in your channel. Made it easier to look for plants that I need and even followed your germinating instructions. Keep up the good work and thank you.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  7 месяцев назад +4

      That is awesome - I am very happy to have helped you out. I'm cure you have very difficult conditions in Texas, so always best to grow plants that can tolerate those conditions, and hence - native.
      I really try to pay attention to plants growing in the wild - specifically the growing conditions and soil (if I'm able). This helps give you a better understanding of what a plant can tolerate than the bland reference material that just says 'well-drained'.

    • @tammiedunbar6166
      @tammiedunbar6166 16 часов назад

      Also, plant the "Tithinoa" Mexican Sunflowers they are a pollinators magnet. It is an annual and it reseeds profusely.

  • @conniegriner1847
    @conniegriner1847 11 месяцев назад +21

    Joe, your native plant videos are top-notch! Thanks for another great profile.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you Connie - I appreciate it.

  • @johnford7847
    @johnford7847 11 месяцев назад +13

    I'm new to the idea of a native garden and I found this very interesting. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +1

      I'm glad you enjoyed it John - this is one of those natives that should be in almost every yard!

  • @Vezmerize
    @Vezmerize 11 месяцев назад +10

    Great profile Joe!

  • @tmeyer2022
    @tmeyer2022 11 месяцев назад +9

    I am in Missouri Zone 6 with Clay soil. I have had Aromatic Aster or decades in raised gardens with the soil amended decades ago. I have 2 clumps that are 3 feet tall and 4 feet across. They bloom as you said, starting in September and lasting thru October, and into mid-November. I keep them from flopping by placing a ring of 18" tall green plastic coated 3" square wire fencing around them. Almost every spring, I split off one or two clumps and give them away to people who ask about them.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +1

      That is cool you use the wire to keep them up. I had thought about that, but try to avoid staking or cages whenever I can. But these are awesome flowers.

    • @tammiedunbar6166
      @tammiedunbar6166 День назад +1

      I worked as a travel nurse in St. Louis Missouri and I was driving around near the Botanical Gardens and saw a huge planting of Aromatic Asters blooming in late September/ October and the migrating Monarch Butterflies were feeding on the nectar before they continued on Southwest to Mexico for their fall migration. The Aromatic Asters are a pollinators magnet for a nectar source during the fall.😊

    • @tammiedunbar6166
      @tammiedunbar6166 18 часов назад

      Also the annual "Tithonia"Mexican Sunflowers are great pollinators nectar plants also, they bloom from early summer till the first hard frost however, they reseed with a vengeance and you will have to keep them in check to prevent them from shading out your other plants if you don't plant them in different space. They can reach the height of 8 feet. And they have multiple branches on one plant. They are still blooming profusely in my garden and I live in Georgia in zone 8a or 8b depending upon the Winter temperatures.

  • @silentlou4375
    @silentlou4375 11 месяцев назад +11

    Great stuff as always. I love this plant as well as the white Aster and have watched them spread naturally over the past 2 years as I’ve let much of my prior lawn grow wild. I’ve never seen a density of bees as I’ve seen on these flowers over the past couple months, it’s very rewarding to see. And another wildlife benefit that I’ve observed is that birds will eat the seeds on the plant thru the winter, so I avoid cutting them down.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you for the kind words! You reminded me that I need to film my 'test strip' a bit more. This time of year it is packed with song birds in the morning just eating seed left and right.

  • @CaeTrae3
    @CaeTrae3 11 месяцев назад +6

    This is extremely helpful as I used these seeds as my wedding favor this past May. I have so many left over and I just moved to new house with a beautiful yard and I'm trying to figure out what to plant over the next year. Thank you!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +1

      I'm glad I could help you out then! And that is a cool idea giving away those seeds as a wedding favor.

  • @ThreeRunHomer
    @ThreeRunHomer 11 месяцев назад +5

    I bought three ‘Raydon’s Favorite’ asters this fall and the blooms are still hanging in there on November 11 (Knoxville TN). I’m glad you also mentioned Tennessee coneflower. It’s a terrific plant although pretty rare, and interestingly the blooms always face east.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      Ok - now I have never noticed the 'East' facing part. But it is true.

    • @tammiedunbar6166
      @tammiedunbar6166 18 часов назад

      I watch the series ( Volunteer Garden) and they cover an array of plants for pollinators and I saw the native Tennessee cone flower on that show. I plan to purchase a few to start a colony in my garden.

  • @barneygimble8984
    @barneygimble8984 11 месяцев назад +5

    I started new england, smooth blue , and aromatic aster this spring.
    They all grow fast and flower the first year from seed.
    Really easy and big pay off.
    Thanks for the smooth blue aster video two years ago .
    My thinking was , smooth blue aster are early fall, new england aster are later fall and aromatic aster are long blooming . And it worked out well
    Thanks again
    (Correction )smooth blue aster, not sky blue aster

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +2

      You are very welcome Barney - and I'm glad you have been having success with all of those Asters! I've got about 5 more species that I grow, but this one, Smooth Blue, and New England are all really great for residential landscaping. Silky Aster is a pretty nice one too, if you have room for one more.

  • @iwalkintherain641
    @iwalkintherain641 11 месяцев назад +3

    Beautiful meadow.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      Thank you - the insect activity in there is amazing.

  • @flatcreek4665
    @flatcreek4665 4 месяца назад

    So happy I have found your channel. I started a pollinator garden this spring. I really appreciate your format & especially appreciate you showing what seedlings look like when they emerge.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  4 месяца назад

      Thank you for the kind words! I really appreciate it. Good luck on your new garden.

  • @Herhighness211
    @Herhighness211 11 месяцев назад +1

    Sheesh, the videos are so impressive and extremely soothing. Planted a native aster out front (suburbs of Philly zone 7) two years ago in autumn. It’s definitely native and it smells magnificent to me! It planted with golden rods and every October I laugh at the mums on everyone’s front yards because I know that when they are in the trash next week my asters will be pimpin’! Also, so many bees show up that I can hear them buzzing from so far away. As an aside, I laugh abt their pumpkins too because I know that I’ll be collecting in a short while for free fertility in my garden beds and compost bins.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      Thank you! That is hilarious because it is true about that Asters, and the pumpkins.

  • @mlynnw7831
    @mlynnw7831 11 месяцев назад +3

    Another very informative video. I really appreciate all of your in depth videos and website articles on native plants. I know if you've covered it, it's the only source I need. Thank you!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      Thank you so MUCH! Please tell your friends!

  • @dedribacell
    @dedribacell 11 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for all the wonderful information you share!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      You are very welcome! I'm happy you enjoy it.

  • @AJsGreenThumbLLC
    @AJsGreenThumbLLC 11 месяцев назад

    Great video! I love asters and I make sure I place them where I don't mind them sprawling. Great late season color.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      Thank you! I thought it was cool that if I gave it it's own space & sun from all directions, it seemed to look good even with the sprawl.

  • @dominiquebarrette9621
    @dominiquebarrette9621 6 месяцев назад

    Hello Joe, I love your videos! Being in zone 5, this plant does not grow in Canada. I envy the plant diversity you have in the US, you guys are so lucky! Keep your country beautify, protect your native species. God Bless you

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  6 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you Dominque - we will do our best to protect our ecosystems. God bless you too!

  • @ziptiefighter
    @ziptiefighter 11 месяцев назад

    Third week of November and I still have Heart-Leafed, Shorts, and yes...Aromatic Asters blooming here in northeast (5b) Wisconsin...all natives 💚
    I've thinned my asters to allow my other natives ample opportunity to prosper as well.
    As a regular winter-sower, I like the idea of a grease pencil for labeling. No worries of UV fading. I have Sharpie'd the name on the duct tape. But I've also written it on the milk jug cap and tucked that inside along the edge as insurance. This has saved me many times.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +1

      That is awesome! My Heart-leafed Asters bloom much earlier - late August to early September. That is a good idea for the milk-jug cap. The grease pencil does work best though. And it can wipe off for reuse, although I usually just cross off and write the next species the following year.

  • @jayallen5440
    @jayallen5440 11 месяцев назад

    Always love your videos - I saw some of these in a neighbor's garden and would love to get some of my own!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      Thank you - you will love this flower!

  • @katiekane5247
    @katiekane5247 11 месяцев назад

    Here in north Georgia 7a-b, there's an Aster for every situation. There's some difference between them but they easily provide 12 weeks of bloom between them. Some do fine in part shade and stay bushy if cut back early in the summer. No matter how rough they may look come fall, they're just humming with bees. The true landscape mums, dendranthema, have bigger blooms, spread slower and do fine with little care. I use the toughest Asters to fill in areas I can't afford plants for yet. Best volunteers you could want!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      Fully agree Katie! I grow about 5-6 species of Aster as of now. And they start blooming in early August, and I still get a few blooms into November. And they are the best volunteers.

  • @paulamorales4819
    @paulamorales4819 8 месяцев назад

    I live in Ontario and a lot of the native plants you showcase are also native here. This one isn't but I find it so fascinating because it makes sense that you would have a later blooming aster for the Monarchs to visit as they make their way south to Mexico. Our September bloomers are so important for them before they go on their journey.
    I'm sure there's a million other co-evolutionary benefits but I thought of that and how cool!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  8 месяцев назад

      The more I observe, the more I learn and appreciate all the symbiotic interactions. I love going to public hunting lands and state parks just to observe what is blooming, insects, etc. It all just begins to make sense (for the most part).
      Also - a month after I made this video I discovered an Aster still blooming in November zone 5 (I'm on the border of 6/7). I gathered some seeds.....I'm sure the fact that it was blooming was somewhat influenced by local climate and light conditions (fairly shady area), but still - to be blooming that late was impressive.

  • @christophertaylor9826
    @christophertaylor9826 11 месяцев назад

    Been looking for this aster forever, thanks and enjoyed your video very much.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      You are very welcome - it's a great addition to any flower bed/yard.

  • @chadrobert116
    @chadrobert116 11 месяцев назад +2

    Wonderful video, thanks mate.

  • @rbthegardennannyllc4219
    @rbthegardennannyllc4219 11 месяцев назад

    I may have to get some of these. I found some for 75% off. Thanks for all the good tips and information.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      75% off? Yes - that sounds like a good deal. I would definitely get them.

  • @katewithat
    @katewithat 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for all the info! Mine is still “new” - growing larger but it hasn’t bloomed yet. I’m hoping to keep it in a container to prevent spreading. 💜🐝🦋

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 месяца назад +1

      You are welcome! It is just about the last plant to bloom, so you never know, you might get a few blooms this year!

  • @nicolenieves389
    @nicolenieves389 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for this video. answered every question i had.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 месяца назад

      You are very welcome - glad you found it helpful

  • @kitty4tify
    @kitty4tify 11 месяцев назад

    I’m hooked on this aster. ❤ asters

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +1

      This is probably my favorite of all the Asters

  • @dellerwin1
    @dellerwin1 4 месяца назад

    Thanks. I suggest that in mid summer, asters are cut back by l/3 to l/2, which I think makes them bushier and more attractive. I think they look great with late-blooming goldenrod. Both are considered keystone natives and provide late season pollen and nectar.

  • @farstrider79
    @farstrider79 11 месяцев назад +3

    I noticed some Aster growing in a yard on the eay yo my daughters school and like it. I need dome color in my yard, it looks rough this time of year. Was thinking of maybe planting it and some perennial sunflowers if i can find a spot. Just killed all the grass in my front yard, need to do some planning 🙂

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +4

      Awesome - Asters are an excellent choice. Having some Penstemon and some kind of Echinacea can help keep color all season.

    • @me43mill69
      @me43mill69 10 месяцев назад +2

      We just bought a house with minimal grass in a higher elevation. Since we are now on a well and septic I think I'm going to start planting wildflowers instead of grass too. Thanks for sharing.

  • @sueshaw6609
    @sueshaw6609 11 месяцев назад

    I love your videos. They are so well done and informative. I’m dying to know what the plant is that I see in the background of your flowers. It looks like a legume of some kind. Fern looking. It’s so pretty growing in with your other flowers. Thank you for your wonderful help!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      Thank you so much for the kind words! Glad you are enjoying my videos.
      There are two species I have that could be considered to have fern-like leaves, and both grow near these Asters. One would be Partridge Pea, which I have a video on - ruclips.net/video/-Is8rLfvsKs/видео.html
      The other would be the Lead Plant, which I only have one specimen, but it grows adjacent to the primary plant I showed in this video. I have no video or even article on the Lead Plant though!

  • @greenrockgarden2851
    @greenrockgarden2851 11 месяцев назад

    I have this plant here in SC. It has spread itself everywhere! I don’t mind, and the pollinators don’t mind. I’ll just pull what I don’t want.
    They bloom just as the echinacea and the black eyed Susans are finishing up.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +1

      These are awesome flowers - I completely agree. In the wild areas they don't do as well since they can be out-competed by taller flowers and grasses. But in beds they can definitely be aggressive. I have them pop up occasionally in other places.

  • @tarawatterson4188
    @tarawatterson4188 11 месяцев назад +2

    Love my aromatic asters. I have some cultuvars and also straight species.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +1

      This is probably my favorite of all the Asters. It just always finds a way to look good, and blooms so late.

  • @dianebeckett1697
    @dianebeckett1697 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for this information

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 месяца назад

      You are very welcome - good luck

  • @Drpaper1
    @Drpaper1 11 месяцев назад

    Why are these soo good

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +1

      They are just about my favorite of all Aster flowers. Showy, blooms a long time, low maintenance, and they bring in all the pollinators.

  • @kathleenreadinger4614
    @kathleenreadinger4614 11 месяцев назад +2

    Great video, in zone 6b, SE, PA. Can you prune the Aromatic Aster, like you do a mum? A more compact plant would appeal to me.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +2

      Hi - yes, you should be able to give it the Chelsea Chop like other Asters. It will reduce the overall size. But, know that it still may flop. I've had them get 'pruned' naturally by deer, and they still tipped over.

    • @dellerwin1
      @dellerwin1 4 месяца назад

      Yes. Cut back l/3 to l/2 in mid summer for bushier, more attractive plant.

  • @leannwoodard7569
    @leannwoodard7569 10 месяцев назад

    What about cutting it back? How and when? Lots of good info, thank you!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  10 месяцев назад

      You can cut it back in Winter to avoid self-seeding, or leave it up until Spring for birds to eat some seed. If when you cut it back you leave 6" of the stalk standing, bees will sometimes nest in it that following growing season.

  • @sheliaheverin8822
    @sheliaheverin8822 11 месяцев назад

    I have one, it's beautiful.

  • @LauraTaylor-xw6xx
    @LauraTaylor-xw6xx 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  10 месяцев назад

      Thank you Laura - I truly appreciate it. Thank you

  • @redbloodedbutterfly
    @redbloodedbutterfly 11 месяцев назад

    I've been trying to figure out if my plants' seeds have been successfully pollinated, or if perhaps there wasn't any suitable pollen available and my plant is self-sterile. I have no shortage of pollinators. However, for some plants, I only have one of that species and I'm surrounded by people with conventional lawns. Would you be able to cover how to tell if a seed has a chance of germinating? For example, what color and thickness might indicate that the seed is likely viable? This would also help me figure out if I'm collecting the seed too early. I don't collect until after things looked dried out or floffy (like the example in your video). I collect seed to share with others. Thanks!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +4

      Hi - I can give you a pretty good answer actually. In regards to flowers, almost all of them can self-pollinate. What I mean is that each flower will have both male and female parts, so when bees go around hitting all the flowers, they transfer pollen to the female parts. Where this doesn't occur is on woody shrubs and many trees. See my video on Spicebush for examples.
      In regards to if they are ready for harvest, I strongly suggest you have a good look at this article. It gives many examples of seed heads and when they are ready. In general, if the head turns brown/dry, it is ready. Also, if birds begin to eat it, it is ready. But I have a decent amount of info and pictures here - growitbuildit.com/how-to-save-and-store-flower-seeds/
      And finally, if you have specific species you are curious about and can't find them on my website, just ask. I have lots of other species I have never made a video or article for.

  • @주명화-w3c
    @주명화-w3c 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm living in S.Korea in east asia, you see. We have various autumn flowers including asters. That's one of my favorites. I ued to love chrysanthemum most, indulged in their bright yellow shiny colors, but I was crazy about asters too. All kinds of asters are capturing my attention with their strong vitality in winter. They are tough and tolerant cold weather. All of them are wild flowers here so just a few of us would want to plant them in their garden. I wish to have my own garden someday, and green house as well. And I would love to plant them in my garden and also in the green house so that I can see their flowers all season long. Also, I guess we need to have honey bees hives inside the green house to pollinate flowers. Do you think it will be possible to make them bloom all season long in the green house, if we care them meticulously well?

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +1

      Hello - It sounds like you have some good goals. I know that most people in South Korea live in apartments, but there are some larger homes too. I hope you are able to have this some day.
      In regards to keeping an Aster blooming all year, I do not think it would be possible. Cold hardy perennials spend the growing season 'building' up to their blooms, and then will go dormant in Winter. This happens to all perennials. And I am not aware of any annual plants that look like Asters.
      But you could try to get a variety of Asters that bloom at different times. For instance, Smooth Blue Aster is about the first to bloom in August, then you could have New England Aster, Short's Aster, Heart Leaf Aster, Silky Aster, and finally Aromatic Aster, which is the last. This could provide 3 months of Aster flowers blooming.

  • @tjcihlar1
    @tjcihlar1 5 дней назад

    Our jerusalem artichokes are blooming right now, they are another very late bloomer. Some of our roses are still going. Our calendula and tithonia have been blooming continuously and are annuals just waiting for the frost to kill them.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  4 дня назад

      That is awesome - I've got a few Maximillian Sunflower still blooming (and Aromatic Aster) and even Spotted Beebalm.

  • @verawallace9055
    @verawallace9055 11 месяцев назад

    Just ordered it from Breck's, I could probably get seeds but the white ones I already have from them bloom in the first year planting

  • @Herculesbiggercousin
    @Herculesbiggercousin 8 месяцев назад

    Any chance you’ll be showcasing Lillium philadelphicum or Lillium michiganese? They’re equally beautiful in my opinion

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  8 месяцев назад

      Not anytime soon. I finally was able to germinate L. philadelphium last year, and transplanted them in October. So hopefully they bloom this year. If that is the case, I will probably give them a second year in the ground before making a video, as I like to get to really know a plant beforehand.

  • @pkortenk
    @pkortenk 11 месяцев назад

    Have you ever had any native plants show up on their own? My property has all of the following: Common Violet, Black eyed Susan, Wild Onion, Pokeweed, Ostrich Fern, Wild Basil, Honewort, Yarrow, Black Raspberry, Elderberry, Goldenrod, Purple Coneflower, and something that I forgot the name of in a shady spot in my lawn.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      Yes I have. Off the top of my head I've had Wild Violet, Late Boneset, Frost Aster, Pokeweed, Yarrow, and several types of Goldenrod.

  • @redbloodedbutterfly
    @redbloodedbutterfly 11 месяцев назад +2

    Your neighbor definitely owes you some honey. His European honeybees have likely eaten from your plants all season long and might have competed with native insects. Hopefully you can convince your neighbor to grow some native Asters and Goldenrods, so his honeybees will have more late season options.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад +1

      They do pretty good with flowers from about June-Aug. But they don't have much before or after. They have lots of Echinacea and Coreopsis, so plenty of blooms....when it is in bloom.

  • @me43mill69
    @me43mill69 10 месяцев назад

    You didn't mention cutting the water back to prevent sprawling, I'm guessing that doesn't work for the aster like it does for some coreopsis?

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  10 месяцев назад

      Hi - that can work for this plant too. Actually any Aster. But this one is just a bit unique since it actually looks good when sprawled.

  • @nickgardner6340
    @nickgardner6340 6 месяцев назад

    Do the seeds require cold stratification??

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  6 месяцев назад

      Officially these shouldn't require stratification. I've always winter sowed them though. But I know there are plenty other Aster species that do not require cold stratification.

  • @jacksonstacy3813
    @jacksonstacy3813 24 дня назад

    I’m pretty sure I planted this species but when I crush the leaves, it doesn’t smell like anything, but it has the same type of blooms

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  23 дня назад

      There are a lot of Aster species. Could be several!

  • @cecilialanders7037
    @cecilialanders7037 11 месяцев назад

    Will this plant grow in northeast Baltimore City, MD 21214?

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  11 месяцев назад

      Hi Cecilia - yes, absolutely.

  • @Spenceham-km3nv
    @Spenceham-km3nv 10 месяцев назад

    hey guys what would happen if someone used the sea cucumber DNA and the millipede DNA to fill the gaps of every farm animals genomes