California native plants: On screens and in gardens this week
California native plants have been here all along, boosting native wildlife and helping keep our climate healthy. We can return the favor by planting and enjoying natives in our gardens and protecting them in our parks and wildlands.
Starting Saturday, the state celebrates California Native Plants Week, and native plants get a special boost from, not surprisingly, the California Native Plant Society. Their one-minute kickoff video can be viewed
here
.
CNPS is promoting the week with the theme “Grow CARE Everywhere.” The acronym stands for a four-branch approach to enjoying and preserving California natives:
— Cultivate. Nursery partners and local CNPS chapters are offering
special events, plant sales and discounts
.
— Act. Dudleya plants are among natives in danger — in this case, from poaching by people who want to cash in on the succulent trend. CNPS notes that plant poaching is a serious problem that puts dozens of species at risk every year. The group is supporting Assembly Bill 223 to make Dudley poaching illegal.
Read more here
and while you’re there check out the adorable Dudleya GIFs associated with the various chapters of CNPS.
— Restore. Local chapters work to promote and protect native plants in their areas. CNPS has
35 local chapters
across the state; information on the
Sacramento Valley Chapter is here
.
— Enjoy. This is the one we can do from anywhere that has Wifi: Take a new 360-degree virtual tour of native gardens every day of the celebration week. Get inspired by visiting real-world urban and mountain gardens, botanic gardens, parks and wildlands all over the state. See CNPS’
special page
for the week for all the links and details.
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This beautiful specimen of ceanothus grows in the UC Davis
Arboretum and Public Garden, which has many natives.
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I also challenge my fellow gardeners to search out and plant at least one California native in their yards this month. These could range from tidy tips to blueblossom ceanothus, from coyote brush to Pacific madrone trees. Oaks, too! (C’mon, the squirrels do it all the time.) California poppy seeds, of course, are always a good bet.
Natives already know how to cope with the California climate — including our drought years. And you’ll be helping insects and birds, too, which depend heavily on native plants.
The nurseries in the area are increasingly tuned into the benefits of native plants, so don’t be afraid to ask about the ones they carry. The UC Davis Arboretum sales are a great source for natives, too. Finally, check out this list at
Calscape
for ideas of native plants to grow.

