Learn to grow goldenrod (solidago), a native pollinator powerhouse that adds a burst of late-season color to your garden.
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." In its native environment, goldenrod thrives in all conditions, including in poor soils along roadsides ...
For shelter, evergreen shrubs, brush piles, or even decorative bundles of twigs and pine boughs can offer much-needed protection from wind and predators. If you have space, leaving a section of your ...
August is the month when goldenrod starts its glorious show, adding splashes of yellow to fields of green everywhere. In North America, there are over 100 different species of goldenrod, each as ...
Hello Mid-Ohio Valley farmers and gardeners. What a change in weather as we say goodbye to the long hot and dry summer and enjoy cooler fall temperatures. We have received a significant amount of rain ...
Swamp sunflowers are tall, native perennials with bright yellow flowers that attract pollinators. Perennial salvias, like ...
One plant really stands out this week: Solidago is in bloom. Golden plumes sway in the early fall breeze as bees contentedly bustle amid the blooms. Like Mahi-Mahi, the colorful dolphin fish or orange ...
Seldom has a plant been so unjustly maligned. For years, people with seasonal allergies have blamed it for the runny noses and watery, itchy eyes that come in late summer. But goldenrod is generally ...
Let’s get something out of the way: If you have late summer allergies, it’s not the goldenrod. The much plainer ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) sends buckets of pollen into the atmosphere around ...
During a seasonal drive to admire sights in nature, the roadsides were filled with purple and yellow. It was a sign fall was upon us. It was a beautiful sight and a welcome site for many pollinators.
We are all able to easily identify GOLDENROD, right? The answer is almost always, “Yes I can.” If you have visited Presque Isle in the last five to six weeks, Goldenrod is in bloom in great abundance.
Terbacil (3-tert-butyl-5-chloro-6-methyluracil) metabolism was evaluated as a possible basis of tolerance in two species, strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa Duchesne) and goldenrod (Solidago fistulosa ...