I still have some trepidation about how this Spring plays out. I think April and May should be watched carefully. These folks seem to know what they are doing. You might ask them.
http://www.gardenillinois.com/
Native Plants are Naturally Nifty!
Have  		you heard the buzz about native plants? Native plants are the topic of  		many magazine & newspaper articles, garden shows, seminars… etc. So  		why is everyone talking about natives?
Natives make  		sense! Native plants “grew up” in Illinois. From our soils to our  		weather, plants that are native to Illinois do more than tolerate our  		conditions…. they seem to enjoy it!
Since they enjoy our  		climate and soils they can grow vigorously and fight off most disease  		organisms and fungal pathogens. This means that you, the gardeners,  		don’t have to spray them with fertilizers, insecticides or fungicides.
Another  		benefit to their Illinois heritage is that our native critters,  		butterflies, birds, bees, etc recognize them as a food source! You might  		say… ahhh….I don’t want critters eating my new plants…. well, yes  		you do! Allow me to explain.. once a native plant is established, it can  		tolerate feeding from our native critters with no problem. For example:  		a Swamp Milkweek (Asclepias incarnata) can be nearly defoliated by  		monarch caterpillars- and it’s ok! The plant is no worse for the wear!
Healthy insect  		populations = healthier food chain. Insects are kind of like the bottom  		of the natural food pyramid. Many animals, birds and reptiles depend on  		insect protein for food. When insect populations are not healthy,  		neither are the populations of certain birds, amphibians, reptiles and  		mammals.
Healthy plant and  		animal populations = healthy food chain = cleaner water = cleaner air=  		healthier humans.
You might be  		thinking… what does any of this have to do with me and my  		yard….well- you’re yard is or should be an ecosystem! We have modified  		95-97% of the land in the lower 48 states… 42% (approximately) of that  		land in in agriculture, and approximately 54% of that land is in  		suburbia. This is where we come in… the gardener. Our backyard gardens  		have never been more powerful than, more needed, than they are today.
Our “natural” areas  		are over-run with invasive plant materials like Russian Olive, Japanese  		Honeysuckle, Garlic Mustard, Tree of Heaven, multiflora rose, crown  		vetch, tall fescue, and the list goes on. If you would like to see a  		complete listing of  		 		 INVASIVE PLANTS check out the Missouri Botanic Garden website.
:}
Go there and read. More next week.
:}