Herbivore Resistant
There's no such thing as a DEER-PROOF or RABBIT-PROOF plant, but these native plants tend to send browsing mammals into a tailspin thanks to their natural defenses. The three rules of herbivore resistance are 1. Spiky, 2. Stinky, and 3. Sickening. These plants use thorns, strong scents, and toxic secondary metabolites like alkaloids, terpenes, and tannins to protect themselves from being eaten. Balance is key! We want to feed local fauna, but your garden is not an open buffet. Strategically place these plants in high traffic areas while creating browsing zones on the edges of your garden.
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Rosy Sedge (Carex Rosea) -
Hairy Wood Mint (Blephilia Hirsuta) -
Red Baneberry (Actaea Rubra) -
Prairie Dock (Silphium Terebinthinaceum) -
Ox Eye (Heliopsis Helianthoides) -
Ninebark (Physocarpus Opulifolius) -
Mead's Sedge (Carex Meadii) -
Ivory Sedge (Carex Eburnea) -
Celandine Poppy (Stylophorum Diphyllum) -
Tall Larkspur (Delphinium Exaltatum) -
Lady Fern (Athyrium Filix-Femina) -
Graceful Sedge (Carex Gracillima) -
Blue Vervain (Verbena Hastata) -
Foamflower (Tiarella cordifolia) -
Common Blue-eyed Grass (Sisyrinchium albidum) -
Early Figwort (Scrophularia Lanceolata) -
Prairie Milkweed (Asclepias Sullivantii) -
Prairie Sage (Artemisia Ludoviciana) -
Large-Flowered Beardtongue (Penstemon Grandiflorus) -
June Grass (Koeleria Macrantha) -
Harlequin Blueflag Iris (Iris Versicolor) -
Jack-in-the-Pulpit (Arisaema Triphyllum) -
May Apple (Podophyllum peltatum) -
Long leaved bluet (Houstonia Longifolia)