Your cart is currently empty!
Get Event Reminders…
…twice a month by subscribing to our newsletter
Subscribe using the form in the page footer below.
Your cart is currently empty!
…twice a month by subscribing to our newsletter
Subscribe using the form in the page footer below.
Dense Blazing Star, Liatris spicata, has long-lasting purple wands of packed blooms that face all directions and bloom from the top of the stem down from midsummer to fall. The blooms resemble feather boas held upright on numerous spikes per plant. Although it lacks smell, Dense Blazing Star will please your other senses: the purple flowers add a visual exclamation point to the garden; your ears will be humming with the sound of delighted bees; and your fingers will love delving through the fuzzy late summer blossoms.
Most Liatris species mature plants have a corm or bulb-like root. They do not spread or create vast colonies from the roots, but instead reseed where they are comfortable. Tubers in mature clumps can be dug out and split to propagate new plants. Seeds on a Liatris stem ripen in sequence and fluff out. To disseminate the seeds in the same way that dandelions do, each seed has some hairs attached as a parachute.
Botanical Name: Liatris spicata
Also Called: Marsh Blazing Star, Button Snakewort
En français: Liatris à épi
See More Plants in this Botanical Family:
Colour:
Blooms:
Sun / Shade:
Water: Needs to stay moist
Soil:
Height:
Width:
Pollinators:
Care:
Ripe seeds may germinate immediately. If sown when young, otherwise, they will germinate in the spring, or they can be gathered and seeded after 90 days of stratification or cold treatment in the spring.
Liatris species generally have no serious pest or disease problems. [credit]
This plant is loved by pollinators! Bumblebees, long-horned bees, leaf-cutting bees, butterflies, and skippers pollinate the flowerheads. These insects feed on nectar, but some bees gather pollen for their larvae.
Dense Blazing Star is deer-resistant.
Like its sister plants, the Rough Blazing Star and the Slender Blazing Star , it is a good candidate for a Pollinator garden.
Tea produced from blazing star roots is used as a folk cure for a variety of internal diseases, including kidney and bladder difficulties, gonorrhea, colic, and delayed menstruation, as well as a gargle for sore throats. Blazingstar was also used in a snakebite poultice.
Dense Blazing Star is endemic to moist prairies, marsh regions, grassland savannahs, and wet places between sand dunes, meadows, and abandoned fields in Ontario and North America. This plant prefers open, sunny places that are kept open by fire, floods, drought, or grazing. It would be ideal for a cottage landscape, wildlife garden, or pollinator garden.
It also looks good as part of a cut flower arrangement.
Cultivars are available both with pink and white flowers and reach a height of 2 feet, 60 cm.
The dense, blazingstar is an unusual but striking houseplant. In containers, consider using the shorter cultivar. They flourish in bright, long-lasting sunlight and should be positioned no more than one foot away from a window. In containers, it requires frequent watering and soil that drains well. Simply repot your plant every time it doubles in size; you shouldn’t need to apply fertiliser.
Logging in to comment gives you more features, but it is not required.
Hardiness or climate zone map are shifting, affecting many factors for growers: seedling death, water, extreme weather, environmental risks.
ZZ Plant care and propagation are easy and straight forward. It just about every qualification needed for a new indoor plant introduction.
Growing a garden is a great way to make your yard look beautiful while adding to nature. Plan your garden to get the most out of it.
If you are fairly new to bulb planting, I suggest that you start with daffodil bulbs. Very few creatures will bother these bulbs. They do well in almost any situation, and they increase their number each year. Tulips, hyacinths, crocuses, and other tasty bulbs are more difficult. Greetings fellow gardeners,
How to chose, transplant, propagate and care for Bromeliad plants. Neoregelia’s foliage is impressive as the blooms.
Winterberry holly leaves fall off in late fall and early winter, leaving a stunning display of brilliant red fruit in your garden. Read more.
Yellow Giant Hyssop grows quickly and Its blooms are thriving nectar for bumblebees, sweat bees, and butterflies. Discover more.
I found a great recipe for rhubarb and orange jam, truly delicious. I picked fresh rhubarb from the garden, and extra oranges in the fridge.
Discover why birds love berried shrubs for winter – Winterberry, Mountain Ash, Cranberry, Coralberry, Tartan Dogwood, Snowberry, Serviceberry, Chokeberry and Elderberry – to provide essential nutrients, calories, and visuals your garden needs!
of art! Create a beautiful plant and pot display with easy steps for all skill levels.
Overwatering plants can drown them, lead to root rot, attract unwanted pests, among others. Use these tips to prevent overwatering plants.
Plant peppers and make terracotta pot wreaths this winter while enjoying the warmth of the woodstove in your garden. You will get the benefit of pollinators going to your peppers and the joy of finished decoration for your outdoor space. A great way to spend your evening!
GardeningCalendar.ca gets some funding from advertisers. If you click on links and advertisements at no cost to you, the site may receive a small commission that helps fund its operation.
© 2024 J&S Calendars Ltd.