Podcasts about liatris

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Best podcasts about liatris

Latest podcast episodes about liatris

Spoken Garden Podcast
Choosing Summer Flowering Bulbs - DIY Garden Minute

Spoken Garden Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2024 2:14


Do you want to add summer flowering bulbs to a specific area of your garden, but aren't sure how to pick the right now? On this episode, I go over how to choose different summer flowering bulbs for your garden by listing three different bulbs that thrive in full sun, part to full shade, under drought conditions, and in boggy or really wet soils! Listen to hear which do best in these different areas for your garden! Bulbs and links mentioned in this episode (some affiliate links below): Begonias, Tuberous Calla Lilies Crocosmia Dahlias Elephant Ears Gladiolus Hostas Iris, Bearded Iris, Siberian Liatris Our YouTube Channel (@spokengarden) for more bulb and plant care videos   Thank you for listening.

Wild For Wildflowers
Dotted Blazing Star (Liatris punctata)

Wild For Wildflowers

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2023 30:27


Were you a late bloomer? Nothing to be embarrassed about, this episode's flower Dotted Blazing Star is a late bloomer too! If you find yourself wandering the prairie in the fall you're likely to stumble upon this flower, and if you're anything like this week's pollinator the Bleeding Flower Moth, you'll be drawn to this bright purple flower too. Join Kelsey and Tenea in learning about this unique member of the asteraceae family. If you like the show please tell a friend and subscribe so we can grow our podcast! We really enjoy making it and hope you do to! Follow us on instagram to see pictures of the flower for each episode @wildforwildflowerspod and you can email us at wildforwildflowerspod@gmail.com Did anyone notice we have new music!! Thanks to our little sibling Nicole Brickell! You can find their music on bandcamp nforeman.bandcamp.com, so please take a listen! Don't forget to get outside and smell the wildflowers!!

dotted blazing star liatris
Let's Argue About Plants
Episode 145: Great Plants for Grouping

Let's Argue About Plants

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2023 56:19


Isn't every plant great in a group? Well, the answer is no. Some plants are too vigorous in their growth habits to share the stage, while others are better if put on a pedestal all their own (i.e. the focal point plants of the landscape). Today's episode we talk about plants that are great in masses—that is to say—in groups of three or more. We have options for shade, choices for sun, and selections for those in-between exposures situations. We'll also feature some great plants that we've seen grouped to perfection in gardens featured in Fine Gardening. And you don't have to be a millionaire to group plants. Many of our suggestions are easily divided after just a year or two, providing you with multiple plants for the price of just one. Expert guest:  Daniel Robarts is a horticulturist at Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens in Boothbay, Maine. Danielle's Plants 'Kitten Around' catmint (Nepeta faassenii 'Kitten Around', Zones 3-8) ‘All Gold' Japanese forest grass (Hakonechloa macra 'All Gold', Zones 5-9) 'Kobold' liatris (Liatris spicata 'Kobold', Zones 3-8) Smooth hydrangea (Hydrangea arborescens and cvs., Zones 3-9)   Carol's Plants ‘Galaxy Blue' agapanthus (Agapanthus ‘Galaxy Blue', Zones 6-10) Feather Falls™ sedge (Carex 'ET CRX01', Zones 5-9) Firefinch™ coneflower (Echinacea purpurea 'G0052Y', Zones 4-8) Flowering tobacco (Nicotiana sylvestris, Zones 10-11)   Expert's Plants ‘Millenium' allium (Allium ‘Millenium', Zones 5-8) 'Brunette' bugbane (Actaea simplex 'Brunette', Zones 3-8) 'Starry Starry Night' hibiscus (Hibiscus 'Starry Starry Night', Zones 4-9)

Focus on Flowers
Liatris spicata

Focus on Flowers

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2023 2:00


Gayfeather (Liatris spicata) is a lovely native plant that attracts butterflies, bumble bees, and other insects.

liatris
Focus on Flowers
Liatris spicata

Focus on Flowers

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2023 2:00


Gayfeather (Liatris spicata) is a lovely native plant that attracts butterflies, bumble bees, and other insects.

liatris
The Witch Bitch Amateur Hour
Deer's Tongue and Pothos - Ep. 249.5

The Witch Bitch Amateur Hour

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2023 77:31


Who called Macy short?Welcome back to WBAH, the podcast where we never mess our episode count!Charlye talks about Liatris odoratissima and how much she HATES office-speak. Macy lets us know all about Hunters robe - the Pothos, that is.Simply CaptivatingCheck it out on Patreon.com/wbahpodcast on Thursdays-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-wbahpodcast.com_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_Want to help support the Podcast? Consider becoming a Patron or OnlyFan!www.patreon.com/wbahpodcastonlyfans.com/wbahpodcastContact Us (Come Eat With Us)Instagram @WitchBitchAmateurHourTwitter @BitchHourFacebook @WitchAmateurHourOnlyfans.com/wbahpodcastwbahpodcast@gmail.comHandwritten letters are actual magic!PO Box 865Canton, Tx75103_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-Come Do Yoga With Macy:patreon.com/macyaniseyogaPlay The Sims With Charlyetwitch.tv/charlye_withawhyTwitter @charlyewithawhyOur Video EditorEldrich Kitchenm.youtube.com/channel/UC_CwBrVMhqezVz_fog716Ow_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-We are not doctors, lawyers, or professionals. We are amateurs, and nothing we say should be taken as advice, instruction, or seriously. Any action taken based on what we say or imply can and will lead to illness, existential crisis, injury, your pets no longer loving you, and death. We make no promise or guarantee, expressed or implied, and assume no legal liability or responsibility for any injuries resulting from the use of information contained within our media.Support the show

GardenDC
Garden Design for Plant Collectors

GardenDC

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2023 62:17


In this episode of GardenDC: The Podcast about Mid-Atlantic Gardening, we talk with garden designer Linda Hostetler, about designing gardens for plant collectors. The plant profile is on Bletilla and we share what's going on in the garden as well as some upcoming local gardening events in the What's New segment. We close out with Sean and Allison McManus of the Spoken Garden, who share the Last Word on why you should plant Liatris. Show Notes are posted at https://washingtongardener.blogspot.com/2023/05/gardendc-podcast-episode-149-garden.html BTW, YOU can become a listener supporter for as little as $0.99 per month! See how at: https://anchor.fm/gardendc/support. If you liked this episode, you may also enjoy listening to: ~ GardenDC Podcast Episode 53: Superior Perennials with Karen Rexrode https://washingtongardener.blogspot.com/2021/04/gardendc-podcast-episode-53-superior.html ~ GardenDC Podcast Episode 89: Working with a Landscape Designer https://washingtongardener.blogspot.com/2022/01/gardendc-podcast-episode-89-working.html We welcome your questions and comments! You can leave a voice mail message for us at: https://anchor.fm/gardendc/message  Note that we may use these messages on a future episode. And be sure to leave us a 5-star review on your favorite podcast platform plus share us on social media with #GardenDC, so other gardeners can find us too! Episode Credits: Host and Producer: Kathy Jentz Editing and Show Notes: Jessica Harden --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gardendc/support

Geeky Girls Knit
Episode 491 ~ In Which We Move Forward in Love & Hope & All the Things

Geeky Girls Knit

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2022


Show Notes:Intro - On the Needles - ~Dami's 2022 Christmas Socks - French Vanilla Cappuccino Socks by ME! on US1.5 (2.5mm), Fangirl Fibers 80/20 Merino Nylon in the January 2022 Gilmore Girls Club S1 E1 “Chilton” colourway & CraftSlayerPDX Fingering Weight in the OOAK Grey colourway~Dust of Snow Wrap by Curious Handmade / Helen Stewart on US6 (4mm), Various Mini SkeinsFinished Projects - ~2022 Preemie Hat #40, 41, 42, & 43 on US6 (4mm), Mint Rain Hand Dyed Tough Sock in the Rainbow colourway, Sunsoaked Sister Everything Earth in the Blue Christmas Without You colourway, & Lion Brand Vanna's Choice in the 125 Taupe colourway | Wonderland Yarns Blossoms in the Liatris #21 colourway & Inner Yarn Zen Fingering in The Old Muddy River Bridge Knitathon colourway | Knit Picks Felici in the Beatnik colourway, Regia Pairfect 4-Ply in the 01735 Rainbow colourway, & Berroco Vintage DK in the 2107 Cracked Pepper colourway | Inner Yarn Zen Fingering in the The Old Muddy River Bridge Knitathon colourway & Lion Brand Vanna's Choice in the 125 Taupe colourway~Shortie Fingerless Mitts for Izzy, Noah, Katy, & Jeremy on US3 (3.25mm), Knit Picks Felici in the Beatnik colourway | Regia Pairfect 4-Ply in the 01735 Rainbow colourway | Seven Sisters Arts Meridian in the Pink Pearl colourway | Fangirl Fibers 80/20 Merino Nylon in the January 2022 Gilmore Girls Club S1 E1 “Chilton” colourwayFlosstube - Begins at timestamp 12:23~FO! Nordic Mitten by JBW Designs / Judy WhitmanMill Hill 14 ct Perforated Paper - WhiteSulky 0035, 1119, 1147, 1174, 1232, 4011, & 4055~FO! Blood and Bone by Kelley King at Forbidden Fiber Co.14 ct Zweigart Aida - GlacierCalled for Forbidden Fiber Co. flosses plus Thistle~The Reigning Lorelais by Leann Ross / Forbidden Fiber Co.14 ct Zweigart Aida - FrozenCalled for Forbidden Fiber Co. Flosses~Move Forward in Love by Modern Folk Embroidery16ct Fortnight Fabrics Hue AidaCalled for DMC floss & Threadworx Bradley's Balloons~The River by Modern Folk EmbroiderySteel City Stitchers 16 ct Aida - Crimson PeakForbidden Fiber Co. in the River of Life colourwayOutlander To Bed or To Sleep Project Bag from StitchToolbox~Edinburgh Castle by Terra Luna StitcheryUsing Pattern Keeper software on Kindle Fire 7Needle Minder from TopKnotStitcher & A Needle Runs Through ItProject Bag from KnitRunDigGrime Guard from Crab Shack StitcheryBitzy Bob Basic from That's So Kelly Co.Silicone tiesYummies (our current favourite things) - ~West Yorkshire Spinners Yarn~Honeyberry Studios 2023 Calendar~Knit Crate - Use the coupon code GEEKY20 to get $40 to spend on your 1st month off any KnitCrate subscription. If you remain a KnitCrate subscriber for 3 months, you'll receive a special gift code giving you another $40 off your 4th month.~Starflower Blanket by Tin Can Knits~Just CrossStitch December 2022~The Black Needle Society Treat Box UnboxingI'm so excited to be a rep for The Black Needle SocietyJoin TBNS Waitlist to be notified when you can subscribe.Save 5% on everything in The Black Needle Society Vault with the code JAVAPURL5What We're Watching, Reading, + Listening To - Please be aware that we do discuss recent tv show episodes that have aired in the last week or so. This is your spoiler warning!October / November / December 2022 RAL - 15 minutes of reading daily challenge* 88-92 of 92 days - 1 or more giveaways for eBook, everyone gets $1.20 off any single pattern coupon code* 61-87 of 92 days - 1 or more giveaways for single pattern* #GGKRAL22* #GGKCSRAL22~ October / November / December* 92 days - 10 entries* 88-91 days - 8 entries* 61-87 days - 5 entries~ Read All 365 days - 10 bonus entriesEpisode 491 Bookshop List~This Way Out by Tufayel Ahmed~June, Reimagined by Rebekah Crane~Gilmore Girls - rewatching Season 4 with the I Am All In With Scott Patterson Podcast~Where the Crawdads Sing~Top Gun: Maverick~Lightyear~The School for Good and Evil~Doctor Who: The Power of the Doctor~The Winchesters~My Favourite Murder podcast~Random Spotify PlaylistsMonthly Giveaways - ~Winner announced - Uru.Yarn by KnitCrate Cotton Basic - 1 skein of Neon~Winner announced - Llama Floss Buddy~Patons North America Kroy Socks in the 55048 Grey brown marl colourway~The World of Cross Stitch Issues 326 & 327~Prizes: If you'd like to donate one, email us at GGKCSpodcast@gmail.com~For any and all giveaways, prizes, competitions, ALs, etc. that we host, the winner(s) have 30 days from the date of announcement (the date the podcast episode in which the winner was announced goes live) to contact us to claim their prize or it will be forfeited. If this occurs, the prize will be used for another giveaway at our discretion. Thanks for understanding!Ask the Geeks - Originally asked/answered in 2014:Heather asks:if you could be on the cast of any show (current or cancelled), which show would you join?Misc. - ~I'm so excited to be a rep for The Black Needle SocietyJoin TBNS Waitlist to be notified when you can subscribe.Save 5% on everything in The Black Needle Society Vault with the code JAVAPURL5~Pride AL - Runs through 1-July-2023. #GGKCSPrideAlong~Support the Podcast, Become A Patron~Support the Podcast, Join us on YouTube~Each week, we create a list on Bookshop of all the books we talk about in that week's episode. Bookshop is an online bookstore with a mission to financially support local, independent bookstores. If you purchase a book from our list, we earn a commission & local, independent bookstores also earn money from your purchase.~Want another way to help support our podcast? Throughout our website, links to books, tv shows, movies, etc. are Amazon Affiliate Links. We receive a portion of what you spend when you click through our website to shop on Amazon. What we receive helps us with the costs associated with producing this podcast as well as with prizes & shipping for giveaways. Thanks in advance for your support!If you are in the UK, please click this link, Amazon.co.uk, or the banner below to shop:If you are in Canada, please click this link, Amazon.ca or the banner below to shop:~For any and all giveaways, prizes, competitions, ALs, etc. that we host, the winner(s) have 30 days from the date of announcement (the date the podcast episode in which the winner was announced goes live) to contact us to claim their prize or it will be forfeited. If this occurs, the prize will be used for another giveaway at our discretion. Thanks for understanding!Find Us Online -C.C. - (she/they)~ on Instagram as CC_JavaPurlDami - (they/them)~ on Instagram as DamiMunroePink Purl (she/her) - ~on Instagram as PinkiePurlJavaPurl Designs~ JavaPurl Designs websiteGGKCS -~ our Facebook group ~ GGKCS Podcast / FlossTube~ our Facebook page~ email us: ggkcspodcast@gmail.com~ on Apple Podcasts~ on YouTube~ Support the Podcast, Become a PatronUntil next time,

Botany One
Botanists find that some herbaceous use fire as a signal to prepare for boosted flowering in the following year

Botany One

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2021 3:40


In the prairies of Minnesota, Liatris aspera is almost a real-life phoenix. You can read the post at: https://www.botany.one/2021/12/botanists-find-that-some-herbaceous-use-fire-as-a-signal-to-prepare-for-boosted-flowering-in-the-following-year/ You can read the original research at: https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.17923

Transfiguration  - BFF.fm
transfiguration #143 best bless mix (tina burner)

Transfiguration - BFF.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2020


Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Playlist 0′00″ Night Swimming by Field Works & Jefre Cantu-Ledesma on Field Works: Ultrasonic 6′00″ Part III by Carlos Niño & Miguel Atwood-Ferguson on Chicago Waves 9′40″ The Goose and the Wren by The Transcendence Orchestra on Feeling the Spirit 13′20″ ash by Gia Margaret on Mia Gargaret 15′20″ Bliss by Tengger on Nomad 19′25″ Sheep Song by Toby Hay on Imaginational Anthem, Vol. X (Overseas Edition) 23′20″ Untitled 1 (Live) by DK on Live at the Edge - EP (Live) 26′00″ Paradise, California by Raymond Richards on The Lost Art of Wandering 30′55″ Pure Bond by World Above on World Above 34′00″ The River That Flows in You Also Flows in Me by Croatian Amor on All in the Same Breath 38′45″ A Space for Dreaming by Laura Cannell on The Earth with Her Crowns 42′15″ Happened by K-LONE on Cape Cira 44′40″ Orchid Child by White Poppy on Paradise Gardens 49′30″ Montagnes Flottantes by Vague Imaginaires on L'île D'or 53′30″ Oakmoss by Bibio on Sleep on the Wing 57′00″ Water Talks by Amy Reid on Isolated Bliss 59′10″ Elegantly Floating by Earthen Sea on Mysteries Compilation - Chapter One 66′00″ Human by Rone on Room with a View 71′00″ Ordinary People by DJ LOSTBOI on The Flash 74′00″ Bake-kujira by iT Boy on The Nail House 79′30″ Flute of Seagulls by OMMA on DOMA 83′00″ Rintocco by Fools on Fools' Harp Vol. 1 86′40″ Nacre Meadow by Nailah Hunter on Nacre Meadow 92′55″ steps by softest on steps 106′10″ Liatris by Sinerider on Moonflowers 110′40″ Time & Space (Short Mix) by Chillax on Oto No Wa: Selected Sounds of Japan 1988-2018 117′15″ Sun by Mndsgn on Forever In Your Sun

The Daily Gardener
September 23, 2019 The Autumn Equinox, Kubla Khan, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Plants by Lewis and Clark, Stuart Robertson, Ruth Patrick, Poems about September, Plant Parenting by Leslie Halleck, Moving Plants, and the 1937 Rose Garden in Hershey, Pennsylva

The Daily Gardener

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2019 14:17


Today is the first day of Autumn also referred to as the Autumn Equinox.   Equinox means ‘equal night’.    On this day, both day and night are nearly the same length.    Thereafter, the dark part of the year begins.          Brevities #OTD  Today is the birthday of the grandson of Genghis Khan, Kubla Khan, who was born on this day in 1215. Kubla Khan's Summer Garden at Xanadu is the subject of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's 1797 poem Kubla Khan. In Xanadu did Kubla Khan A stately pleasure-dome decree: Where Alph, the sacred river, ran Through caverns measureless to man Down to a sunless sea. So twice five miles of fertile ground With walls and towers were girdled round; And there were gardens bright with sinuous rills, Where blossomed many an incense-bearing tree; And here were forests ancient as the hills, Enfolding sunny spots of greenery.    Coleridge's Kubla Kahn is regarded as one of his most important works. Coleridge said that he composed the entire poem while in a dreamlike state, drowsy from opium he had as medication. When he woke up, he remembered the entire poem and immediately set about writing it down. But then, he was interrupted by a knock at his door and he received a visitor. Sadly, when the visitor left, his perfect recollection of the poem failed him and he was only able to finish the poem in fragments. The poem begins by describing Kahn's palace and the garden contrasted with the setting of the ancient Mongolian forest. Although Coleridge wrote this poem in 1797, he didn't share it with the world until urged to do so by his friend Lord Byron. Together, Coleridge's poem and the adventurer, Marco Polo, brought world-wide attention to Kubla Kahn and his achievements.   #OTD  Today in 1806, Lewis and Clark returned to St. Louis after spending over two years exploring the headwaters of the Missouri River in an effort to find a route to the Pacific.  They returned with their journals and with plant specimens. Here's just a handful of the plants they discovered (I picked the ones you might be the most familiar with): Snow-on-the-mountain (Euphorbia marginata) Creeping juniper (Juniperus horizontalis) False indigo (Amorpha fruticosa) Needle-and-thread grass also called porcupine grass (Hesperostipa comata) Purple coneflower (Echinacea angustifolia) Rough gayfeather also called large button snakeroot (Liatris aspera) Wild four-o'clock (Mirabilis nyctaginea) Wild rice (Zizania palustris) Wild rose (Rosa arkansana)   #OTD  Today is the anniversary of the death of Stuart Robertson who died on this day in 2009. Robertson was a professional gardener in Montreal, although he was born in England. In 1981, Robertson began work as a gardening columnist for the Montreal Gazette. In 1982, Robertson added the title of broadcaster to his repertoire, as a member of the show Radio Noon on CBC Radio One. Robertson also wrote two books on gardening. A passionate, leading organic gardener, his first book was Stuart Robertson's Tips on Organic Gardening, which was published in 2007. The following year, he wrote Stuart Robertson's Tips on Container Gardening. At the age of 50, Robertson learned he had non-Hodgkins lymphoma, a type of cancer of the lymph nodes. When it returned later in life, he received a bone-marrow transplant. Robertson's colleagues recall him as a gentleman; he had class, strength, and optimism.  In an article announcing Robertson's passing in his hometown paper, The Gazette out of Montreal, poignantly reported: "His final column, which appeared Sept 19, read in part 'We're getting to the sad time of the year, when we have to start thinking about cooler weather and the end of the growing season.'"     #OTD  Today is the anniversary of the death of the botanist Ruth Patrick who died on this day in 2013 at the age of 105. Patrick was known for a little saying that went like this: you can’t live a day without diatoms. Diatoms are a single-celled algae; this was Patrick's way of saying that all life is interconnected and that nature matters. Ruth Patrick understood this premise very well. She was a leading voice in the recognition that the smallest organisms, living in communities, were more reliable than an individual species as indicators of pollution. Ruth Patrick was born in Topeka, Kansas. Her father was an attorney and when he wasn't working he loved to take Ruth and her sister out into nature. The girls would collect samples from streams and ponds and then get a closer look with the brass microscope in their father's study. Later, Ruth would often say that her father had always encouraged her to leave the world a better place for having passed through it. In 1975, Patrick was the first woman elected president of the American Society of Naturalists. She worked for 80 years at The Academy of Natural Sciences. In 1996, she was awarded the country's National Medal of Science from President Bill Clinton.   Unearthed Words "When the goldenrod is yellow,  And leaves are turning brown -  Reluctantly the summer goes  In a cloud of thistledown.   When squirrels are harvesting  And birds in flight appear -  By these autumn signs we know  September days are here."  - Beverly Ashour, September     "The back door bangs shut! September gust." - Mike Garofalo, Cuttings:Haiku, Concrete and Short Poems      Today's book recommendation: Plant Parenting by Leslie Halleck This is a new book that just came out in June of this year from Timber Press. The author, Leslie Halleck, founded Halleck Horticultural and she likes to say that when it comes to plants, people naturally feel a relationship with them. Once people fall in love with plants, they want more of them. This is where propagating becomes a useful skill to learn. Mastering propagation is a snap with Halleck's book which breaks down the different options and modern resources available to gardeners. This book offers up some pretty marvelous photos along with simple instructions.   Halleck embraces the trends that are used nowadays by interior designers who incorporate plants as a way to add sculptural elements and warmth to the indoors. The images in Halleck's book are gorgeous and they feel very on trend. If you have gardeners in your life, be sure to share this lovely, friendly introduction to propagating houseplants, flowers, and vegetables.     Today's Garden Chore Divide and move plants that have grown too big in your garden.   After the plants in your garden have finished flowering, autumn is the best time of year to move them. Despite the cooler air temps, the ground is still warm enough to provide the right just the right environment for root growth.   This year, the hostas and astilbes in my garden needed thinning. With my hostas, I just take a sharp knife or shovel and divide the hosta while it's still in the ground. Then, I just remove half the hosta and leave the other half in place; the mother plant bounces back pretty fast.   For the astilbe, or any other plants with tough roots, I will dig up the whole plant and then use a serrated knife to divide the plant into sections and then replant those wherever I want them in the garden.         Something Sweet  Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart #OTD On this day in 1937, the Evening Report out of Lebanon, Pennsylvania reported on a rose garden in Hershey, Pennsylvania. The 12,500 rose plants of the Hershey Rose Garden were in their September glory. The rose garden was to be dedicated the following June, when its 20,000 plants would be in bloom. The garden had attracted, 125,000 visitors from Pennsylvania and ... other  neighboring states since its opening in May, 1937. An unusual feature of the garden was that, instead of twenty or twenty-five roses of one variety in a bed, the plants in the Hershey Rose Garden numbered as high as 175 in a single bed. And there was a lake within the garden. It was surround with the deep orange-red Gloria Mundi, the Mermaid (with its single, pale yellow bloom), the Jacotte (with its orange bloom), and the Eblouissant (a wonderful tiny rose with double, globular flowers that had long-lasting red color and was nested in bronze foliage on a very dwarf plant).    Thanks for listening to the daily gardener, and remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."

Spoken Garden Podcast
Blazing Star Liatris: Butterflies and Their Favorite Flowers - DIY GM Ep. 84

Spoken Garden Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2019 1:44


This is the DIY Garden Minute by Spoken Garden!  "Teaching you tips and tricks for your Garden in one minute!"       Today's topic is Butterflies and one of their favorite flowers, the Blazing Star Liatris!   It's spring and that means summer is not far behind for your garden can showcase gorgeous flowers! This also means our local pollinators and especially Butterflies could show up in your garden. If you want to attract Butterflies to your garden this year, make sure to have Blazing Star or also known as Liatris spicata plants in your yard.        See you in the garden!

Focus on Flowers
Liatris Is A Monarch Magnet

Focus on Flowers

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2018 2:00


Liatris attracts lots of those lovely Monarch butterflies into our gardens.

Across the Hedge
Episode 1:Shame and Guilt Culture

Across the Hedge

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2016 32:18


In our inaugural episode we discuss the difference between shame and guilt culture and how that affects modern heathens seeking to adopt a heathen worldview. Our herb this week is Liatris spicata, also known as Gayfeather or Snakeroot. Our recipe this week is Ham and Beans, and the household hint is about excellent uses for coconut oil. Show notes for this episode are on our website http://www.AcrossTheHedge.com. This episode is 32 minutes long, and contains swearing.

Wild Ideas...The Podcast - The Wilderness Center

Gary explains semipalmated while discussing the Semipalmated Sandpiper. Gordon’s in love with Liatris, Blazing Star. Zombie Ants are the topic of the interview with David Hughes from Penn State University. Strange fungus controls the ant’s behavior.