7 plants I'll never grow again* 🌿 (*probably 😃)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 20. 06. 2024
  • There's a lot of seed starting going on here! Join me today as I start a few things (many of which are new to me) and talk through my process, then get a tour of what's already growing under lights.
    Spoiler alert: I definitely planted too much. I guess this is just my lot in life, to be buried in sea of seedlings because I lack any self control around plants.
    There's a few plants that I'll probably never grow again. Some because they were bad actors, some because they were misunderstood, and others because I just don't care for them.
    What plants won't you grow again?
    Just because these plants aren't for me, doesn't mean you might shouldn't necessarily grow them. If you love them and they do well for you, then grow them!
    --------- A B O U T -----------
    My name is Erin and I love sharing inspiration and information with real-life gardeners. I live and garden in southeastern Wisconsin, zone 5b/6a.
    If you liked this video give it a thumbs up and if you loved it, please subscribe and click the bell so you never miss a new video! Thank you for your support.
    🌿Blog: www.theimpatientgardener.com
    🌿Facebook: / impatientgardener
    🌿Instagram: / impatientgardener
    📩 erin@theimpatientgardener.com
    Some affiliate links may appear. I may make a small commission if you purchase through these links. Thanks for your support. You can see all my favorite products on my Amazon storefront at www.amazon.com/shop/impatient...
    Music in my videos from: bit.ly/39wBm5f
    Mail to:
    USPS: The Impatient Gardener
    P.O. Box 99
    Belgium, WI 53004
    UPS/FedEx: The Impatient Gardener
    125 E. Main St.
    Port Washington, WI 53074

Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @TheImpatientGardener
    @TheImpatientGardener  Před 2 měsíci +56

    What plants won't you grow again? Are you horrified by any on my list?

    • @goodgugamuga
      @goodgugamuga Před 2 měsíci +22

      Loriope is the Devil and I'll never plant it again.

    • @TheImpatientGardener
      @TheImpatientGardener  Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@goodgugamuga Ooh that’s a good one for the list!

    • @achnix3167
      @achnix3167 Před 2 měsíci +4

      ​@@goodgugamugacan you tell me why

    • @stetrick612
      @stetrick612 Před 2 měsíci +29

      I think I'm giving up on Heuchera this year. They are very expensive "annuals" for me. I may consider some Heucherellas if they have an interesting enough contrasting color, but I'm done wasting my money with Heuchera.

    • @achnix3167
      @achnix3167 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@stetrick612 put them in pots to let them grow strong and you need to have drainage in the garden, dont plant too deep. Thats really it unless theyre getting eaten

  • @MyFocusVaries
    @MyFocusVaries Před 2 měsíci +116

    Beware of plants in a private sale where someone has a ton of them potted up. Ask yourself why.

  • @littlequickfire3296
    @littlequickfire3296 Před 2 měsíci +200

    If you ever feel stupid about accidentally planting a pest. Just know I planted spearmint, peppermint, and lemon balm all in the same garden bed. 😂😅 Hope that makes someone feel better lol

  • @ernestinechersak4615
    @ernestinechersak4615 Před 2 měsíci +109

    I have a simple rule in gardening. Plant what makes you happy.

    • @dougr.2245
      @dougr.2245 Před měsícem +4

      As a long time gardener, just be sure that what makes you happy today won't be your nightmare tomorrow (that is in a few years.)

    • @acustomer7216
      @acustomer7216 Před měsícem +2

      My dad had a clump if day lilies from his grandmother's yard that I split between my house & 2 friends. It has a huge Orange triple bloom & I spread them down my fence line. I live it when they bloom. Lily if the valley smells wonderful but is highly poisonous, even to handle

  • @poorthing
    @poorthing Před měsícem +86

    I'm thrilled when anything lives

  • @rhus36
    @rhus36 Před 2 měsíci +270

    Mint. Enough said.

    • @lizdeken9710
      @lizdeken9710 Před 2 měsíci +2

      😂😂😂😂

    • @alicianorvell3229
      @alicianorvell3229 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Ok, I’m such an idiot, I planted mint in my flowerbed. It has yet to really get going but I’m sure it’s coming 😅

    • @lilygirl2719
      @lilygirl2719 Před 2 měsíci +2

      If you can let mint dry out it will die. (not water it and no rain -)

    • @ginnytalbert3696
      @ginnytalbert3696 Před 2 měsíci +4

      Only in pots set on a hard surface (they can escape pots with those runnrrs)

    • @lilygirl2719
      @lilygirl2719 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@alicianorvell3229 I planted mint under a tree in horrible soil that I couldn't get anything else to grow. It has concrete edging all around. I think I'll be okay there but will still keep a watch on it. If it starts to spread outside the edging, I'll cut the sprinkler off that waters it.

  • @jjbud3124
    @jjbud3124 Před měsícem +65

    We had lily of the valley when I was growing up. My dad was a gardener. He had it planted at the edge of the woods. It was lovely there, needed absolutely no care and the lawn mower kept it from spreading into the yard. It was just fine at the edge of the woods and was beautiful there.

    • @unemilifleur
      @unemilifleur Před měsícem +4

      Yeah my grandmother had a patch around a weeping tree. The lawn mower kept it from spreading and it was beautiful. When I was a kid I loved those flowers and wanted some too, but now I don’t have that kind of space for toxic flowers.

    • @mollie3244
      @mollie3244 Před měsícem +6

      @@unemilifleur Really, in the right place they are easy to manage. I mean if they run around under shrubs, how bad?

    • @Susweca5569
      @Susweca5569 Před měsícem +8

      There was lily of the valley along the hedge at the house where I grew up that were planted when my mother was one year old. They stayed there for nearly a hundred years, literally, until the new owners built a brick wall fence.
      I always looked forward to them in the spring, and they were never a problem.

  • @deborahandrianos463
    @deborahandrianos463 Před 2 měsíci +71

    Morning glories 20 years still pulling out the runners 😡

    • @SoulInquiries
      @SoulInquiries Před měsícem +1

      Grandpa Ott ... UGH!!!

    • @edwinamendelssohn5129
      @edwinamendelssohn5129 Před 29 dny +1

      You must live in a warm climate

    • @pattidalrymple3055
      @pattidalrymple3055 Před 25 dny +3

      Morning glory or bindweed?

    • @donamurphy8182
      @donamurphy8182 Před 24 dny +1

      I found what I thought was a wild Morning Glory in a pile of loom that was delivered so I rescued a few and found out later it was an undesirable plant/weed called choke weed. It winds itself up other plants tightly and I regret not knowing!

    • @debbydoodler33
      @debbydoodler33 Před 20 dny

      It's probably bindweed

  • @andrewh6615
    @andrewh6615 Před 2 měsíci +103

    I feel like everyone has that one plant that sends them into an uncontrollable, blinding petty rage. It’s like a rite of passage for every gardener 🤣

    • @truthtalker4038
      @truthtalker4038 Před 2 měsíci +3

      LOL

    • @CasaBonitaDominical
      @CasaBonitaDominical Před 2 měsíci +6

      Not that I planted it, but this was my reaction to poison ivy. Couldn’t get rid of it, and was seeing it everywhere, even in my dreams (nightmares).

    • @alexandrashier5216
      @alexandrashier5216 Před 2 měsíci +1

      My husband HATES Red Osier Dogwood 😆 he says never ever plant that in the yard anywhere haha

    • @emmahilburn1732
      @emmahilburn1732 Před 2 měsíci +7

      Ground ivy. Just when you think it's gone, nope.

    • @bethanytrammell7335
      @bethanytrammell7335 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Winter creeper! AAARRGHH

  • @marywilson7669
    @marywilson7669 Před měsícem +40

    It’s never a “mistake” it’s a learning curve🤣

    • @dougr.2245
      @dougr.2245 Před měsícem +4

      God bless your positive attitude.

  • @aliciawimberly3207
    @aliciawimberly3207 Před 2 měsíci +57

    Somebody might pull my southern card but crepe myrtle is my nemesis!! Our rivalry is so next level…. I’ve tried to decimate their numbers and they’ve fought back with their strappy, switchy limbs and endless roots and shoots. Many tears, some crepe murder, and one corneal abrasion later….not much has changed. They’re still out there. Laughing at me.

    • @Feliciab67
      @Feliciab67 Před měsícem +5

      😂 Crepe murder!!!

    • @LittleRoseMouse
      @LittleRoseMouse Před měsícem +1

      😂

    • @mollie3244
      @mollie3244 Před měsícem +2

      Are you complaining or boasting lol. Have tried a few times, bringing it in over winter. Never lasted a year here in Ireland.

    • @dw387
      @dw387 Před měsícem +1

      Yes, I hate crepe myrtle. It has a mind of its own and keeps spreading. Previous homeowner planted the dreadful thing. I keep fighting.

    • @monicageistwhite779
      @monicageistwhite779 Před měsícem +2

      Very difficult to grow in the southwest but there are some beautiful crepe myrtle shrubs in this area that are stunning!!

  • @sueh2225
    @sueh2225 Před měsícem +26

    Bamboo and pampas grass. Our neighbor has these two things plants right next to our fence and they spread like crazy. They’re invasive and hard to kill. In fact, if you try to chop it back or kill it, it just grows back more aggressively. Also, bulb plants spread and are hard to dig out.

    • @jamieryman
      @jamieryman Před měsícem +1

      OMG yes! I moved into a rental once with Bamboo & yikes 😳

    • @jaycilangehennig2059
      @jaycilangehennig2059 Před 14 dny

      I'm still trying to dig up the bamboo the previous owners planted probably 50 years ago. So annoying. Also, Nandina, so invasive. 🤦🤦🤦

  • @bettyherzberg3125
    @bettyherzberg3125 Před měsícem +33

    I love Lily of the Valley, but I have learned how to tame it. We put a patio by the side of our house. There was a 4" gap between it and the fence. I put a piece of metal edging under the fence. Placed the flowers between the two and let it fill in the area. And now eight years later they are still contained. Did this with some mint also, and so far it has stayed corraled.

    • @Feliciab67
      @Feliciab67 Před měsícem +4

      That is an awesome idea! So true some of these "bad" plants just need to be contained.

    • @Jack-py3cv
      @Jack-py3cv Před měsícem +3

      I love Lily of the Vally too. My Grandparents had a fish pond with rocks and fern behind it and Lily of the Valley. It was contained and the fragrance was amazing.

    • @myconfusedmerriment
      @myconfusedmerriment Před 22 dny

      I was so excited to plant Lily of the valley because I’m a May baby and it’s my birth month flower. I knew nothing about its growth habit. Thank goodness I only bought 2!! 😂 I’m probably going to cut it back significantly this year because I had no idea it would spread so fast, but it has filled out the bed nicely.

  • @flam8882
    @flam8882 Před 2 měsíci +79

    Snow on the mountain.
    I'm still digging it up after 8 years

    • @pamelap.123
      @pamelap.123 Před 2 měsíci +4

      I fought that thug for 3 years and finally had to use chemicals. It was awful.

    • @pt8019
      @pt8019 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Oh, oh! I have been desperately trying to grow it! I better rethink that plan.

    • @eschaefer6512
      @eschaefer6512 Před 2 měsíci +5

      The worst. I think the tiniest piece of root will generate a takeover. Impossible to get rid of without removing every bit of soil a good six inches down across the entire area.

    • @eschaefer6512
      @eschaefer6512 Před 2 měsíci +3

      In my ignorance I have a lot of plant thugs growing. That same Artimisia and an aggressive form of Liriope. Day lilies are messy. I’ve gotten rid of a lot of bearded Irises. The flowers are too top heavy and always get knocked down by the inevitable wind. I have two varieties that are a little on the shorter side and seem to hold up better against the wind. I have some Bamboo which is a big truant but in their case they are so ravishing that I don’t mind doing battle against them. Let’s just say I have an ax.

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@pamelap.123almost forgot about this one, but think I will need chems for that plaintan hosta also.

  • @Jenny-bc5kz
    @Jenny-bc5kz Před 2 měsíci +133

    Nurseries need to take part of the blame. They need to be upfront to the general public on what can be invasive in their area and clearly mark it as such. Either invasive due to runners, rhizomes, re seeding etc
    Invasives can cause such a big problem with our native plants being choked out . Most people wont do what is needed to eradicate a bully in the garden. If people were informed they could make a decision about that plant as they are shopping for one.

    • @TheImpatientGardener
      @TheImpatientGardener  Před 2 měsíci +27

      I agree. There are some plants that simply should not be sold or should come with a BIG warning if they are.

    • @katiedc8239
      @katiedc8239 Před 2 měsíci +22

      I completely agree! I worked at a garden center and they started selling Trumpet Vine, which in our area IS totally invasive, and I (sarcastically 😏) said, "Why don't we sell some dandelions and kudzu vine while we're at it?" Crazy.

    • @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane
      @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane Před 2 měsíci +5

      I agree!

    • @jackiewhitney5031
      @jackiewhitney5031 Před 2 měsíci +12

      @@TheImpatientGardener I guess nurseries are there to just sell whatever makes them profit. We the consumer need to always take the time to screenshot the plant at the nursery and then go home and do a lot of research. I do not trust nursery people at all. I've been told many lies till I learned to start doing my own research so I can't blame anybody but myself and nobody else! I'm almost 70 and I guess I've learned to never buy anything because it's cute or pretty. Lessons learned! Buyer beware!

    • @jonmcclung5597
      @jonmcclung5597 Před 2 měsíci +17

      Definitely agree with this. You've got different levels:
      1. native and plays nice
      2. Native and aggressive
      3. Exotic and plays nice
      4. Exotic and invasive
      4 should probably be illegal to sell. The others should be labeled clearly and accurately. I know it depends on region, microclimate, etc. but surely they could figure something out.

  • @somethingorotheridunno
    @somethingorotheridunno Před 2 měsíci +45

    Japanese Knotweed. My god, once that takes hold in the garden it's like Day Of The Triffids in the blink of an eye.

    • @aprilm9551
      @aprilm9551 Před měsícem +2

      I had to deal with that a few years ago. It popped up in my garden, don't know how it got there. Then just started going crazy. I recall looking up on the internet first to figure out what it was, then to find solutions for dealing with it. One blog gave some very good advice (applies to any invasive plant, actually) and that is no plant can move faster than we can! So we just keep pulling/chopping/ whatever needs to be done and we will win. Yes, occassionally a little might pop up every now and then (I did get rid of the knotweed!!). This advice gave me hope and strength.

    • @nikkihorn3852
      @nikkihorn3852 Před měsícem +1

      I pulled some out of one my beds yesterday. Digging out the runners was a beast, ended up having to replant the whole area. Hope I got most of it🤞

    • @marilynwhitney5476
      @marilynwhitney5476 Před měsícem

      Just the suffit "weed" is a bit of a warning sign!

    • @pendlera2959
      @pendlera2959 Před měsícem +2

      In the UK knotweed on your property or even on your neighbor's property can severely reduce the sale value. It's extremely invasive.

    • @davedamerjian6035
      @davedamerjian6035 Před měsícem

      its all over our area, thank goodness out of range of my home but not that far away. It loves the edges of forests and marshes and side of the hiway. I cant imagine the pain one must go through to eradicate it.

  • @elizabethbarberis9957
    @elizabethbarberis9957 Před 23 dny +13

    I love daylilies. I had a bigger garden and it was relaxing for me after work to groom the plants and see how everything was doing. I would often dead head the daylilies at sundown so the next day there weren't dead blooms hanging. I like to fuss😊.

    • @juliam3980
      @juliam3980 Před 11 dny

      When I lived in Wisconsin I loved daylilies as well. Did you know the flowers are delicious? The petals taste kind of like cucumber.

  • @dianepuskas6362
    @dianepuskas6362 Před 2 měsíci +44

    Vinca major. I took a small clump from my mother’s garden to help fill in my new garden space when I bought our home. It has been 20 years of trimming and yanking just to keep it contained within a space surrounded by concrete. It even overtook mint!

    • @Christina-Ray
      @Christina-Ray Před měsícem

      Wow! Planted a bunch of these last year . They did well but they didn’t come back this year. I live on SC coast ! Thank you for your video ❤

    • @tinaknutsen
      @tinaknutsen Před měsícem +3

      Diane
      I had it on the side drive way it had been planted by previous owners. I got tired of trying to dig it up and 5-6 years ago I took my auger and planted a bunch of purple, pink and white tulips(early, mid and late varieties) it is the only area the squirrels haven’t eaten my tulip bulbs and I think it is because of the densed mat the Vinca creates… makes sorta like a netting the squirrels can’t get to.
      I love it now… it has a cottage look from January and still blooming in the second week of May.

    • @myconfusedmerriment
      @myconfusedmerriment Před 22 dny

      Vinca’s my nemesis lol. It was planted in my front bed by the previous homeowner. For a couple of years I let it fill in the bed while new plants got established, but I had to hack it back multiple times every season so it wouldn’t completely smother the other plants! I finally dug it all out, but those roots are long and winding and I still have a couple shoots pop up here and there. 🙄

  • @guyjulius8078
    @guyjulius8078 Před 2 měsíci +106

    Twilight Evening Primrose and I are about to have words. I’m the kinda guy who always feels the need to divide and propagate my perennials because I’m a poor, and boy was I played the fool. This primrose done danced her way ALL over the place, and my idiot self has unleashed the beast.

    • @dglemmer1
      @dglemmer1 Před 2 měsíci +18

      You’re funny!

    • @Thorn99855
      @Thorn99855 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Feel good about tearing some out and just composting or pitching them. It's okay. If you try to replant everything to some other location, you're gonna go crazy. Toss em.

    • @amyhenke4862
      @amyhenke4862 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Can I ask what zone you live in? I started some seeds and now you've have me worried I should chuck before I make a mistake planting them.

    • @summitsandy
      @summitsandy Před 2 měsíci +5

      They are well behaved in a dry, central CA garden that receives no summer rain and only a little supplemental water. But mine became an ugly disaster when they spread into a shady garden that did receive a little summer water. They went crazy and were nearly impossible to remove, And the worst part was that the leaves were a splotchy red/green andI they totally stopped blooming.

    • @marydrew3568
      @marydrew3568 Před 2 měsíci +1

      😂

  • @karenraunft9824
    @karenraunft9824 Před měsícem +12

    I usually watch You Tube on the television so don't make or read comments. Today was the exception. Your video sounded like I think, so I found a way to subscribe and found you and your commenters on the computer. What a hoot! I am 78 but we moved into a new build home last year after escaping from Florida, retirement nightmare. I physically have to depend on gardener/ grass cutter help now but the comments sent me down memory road.
    From the hill by the driveway in Ohio where I planted English ivy and spent into my late middle age tugging out the mess while dodging snakes and spiders to the gorgeous hydrangeas under my white pines that would not turn blue enough until the last fatal amendment dose which left them dead the next morning. The rose garden was expensively fenced by my husband to the height of 8 to 12 feet that overnight became the deer Olympic training high jump site leaving the roses eaten to the ground by morning. I left my patchy impatiens to my eighty something Dad to care for when we took a vacation. Upon returning the stinkers were two feet high mounds and gorgeous. I laughed so hard at you and your commenters and now I am smiling at all these memories.
    This new house is in Mid North Carolina and I am afraid I am heading down the same path. I stopped at one fancy garden center and was trying to buy some substantial sized trees as recommended by our sweet realtor and was informed the garden center would charge extra for delivery to our more rural area. They also wouldn't talk about choices unless we met with the design department which required a $3500.00 budget base to begin with. The next center I approached informed me they do not sell pines, which I am looking for, because "people don't want them". We are in the big forest areas around Chapel Hill/Pittsboro which are mainly Loblolly Pines. My husband and I sat in the car and laughed until tears ran down our face.
    Thank you Erin

  • @lindagrigsby3699
    @lindagrigsby3699 Před 2 měsíci +34

    Erin, thank you for giving us permission to not like certain plants to grow in our gardens!! I realize it's a very personal decision, but we have the right to spend money, work, time, sweat on plants that do WELL for us and make us happy. I personally do not like hot colored flowers in red, orange, hot yellow. I'm in Texas, and it's already hot enough without adding hot colors. Also, I'll never grow plants that spread or reseed aggressively....too much work. I've learned to be careful of plants that friends are too eager to share...they are often very aggressive, that's why they have so much of it to give away.

  • @lisas3692
    @lisas3692 Před 2 měsíci +100

    Lamium anyone? And whoever planted Star of Bethlehem on my property, however many owners ago, will forever feel my wrath.
    Erin - please make your next video “plants/shrubs/trees I can’t live without!” Love your honest, humor and knowledge (however that’s been obtained - lol)

    • @UnderAPileOfScrap
      @UnderAPileOfScrap Před 2 měsíci +3

      OMG, Star of Bethlehem is crazy!! I didn't plant it in my yard and I sure didn't remember seeing it when we moved into our home, but it has taken over like it has squatter's rights. PS: Scilla is pretty much the same way, but doesn't last as long - and I DID plant that one when I didn't know plants could be invasive.

    • @jessicaeiss2541
      @jessicaeiss2541 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I actually have a lot of Star of Bethlehem and don't mind them. They can be mowed down, and at least they're easy to dig the clumps up.

    • @pamelap.123
      @pamelap.123 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I
      Lamium is well-behaved for me and I love it, but Star of Bethlehem is not my favorite.

    • @nikkistewart6767
      @nikkistewart6767 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I recently bought a house that has a small patch of Lamium around a rock and l love it. I would like to plant more somewhere in my yard.

    • @Sue-ec6un
      @Sue-ec6un Před 2 měsíci

      Star of Bethlehem, other than being a pretty little white flower will run wild...I let one stay thinking how cute it was...the next year I was digging out dozens and all their little baby bulbs...It grows on the shady side of the hill behind my house...and there, I just ignore it!

  • @UnicornGirlsNY
    @UnicornGirlsNY Před 2 měsíci +25

    Wisteria, never ever again.

    • @jamieryman
      @jamieryman Před měsícem +1

      Someone just told me about one having to be cut down, off the TOP of their garage 😮

  • @twilde3754
    @twilde3754 Před 2 měsíci +27

    I've never planted it, but I've worked for years to get it out of my garden/yard -- Sumac -- Tree of Heaven. Painful!!!

    • @redlantern3371
      @redlantern3371 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Oh yes.....In my old house there was a grove of it in the side yard. Although I liked the pretty palmated leaves, no matter how many times I cut them down, they grew back. Trees of Hell.

    • @edanaestenes9656
      @edanaestenes9656 Před 2 měsíci +1

      You can't cut them down, because they will send out a runner and a new one will pop up. You have to completely did it out. Also in NJ those crazy new invasive moths loves the tree of heaven. Trees of heaven are all over the place along the sides of roads. It's an invasive in NJ. And NJ is getting ready to ban those pear trees that bloom in April. They are the most fast spreading thing I have ever seen in trees.

    • @mollie3244
      @mollie3244 Před měsícem

      I have a couple of staghorn sumac but as long as I get to the runner in time I don't find it a problem. The worst is when the root stock of an ornamental cherry goes rampaging around. They are impossible. I've been digging them out of this garden for years and years and they are still going. Even if you dig out the original tree the roots are still running around and popping up everywhere.

  • @jeanemery1
    @jeanemery1 Před měsícem +9

    I live in the mountains in AZ. I grateful if ANYTHING grows. Very few plants are invasive here.

  • @iimoreno29
    @iimoreno29 Před 2 měsíci +68

    Yucca. Those suckers never die!

    • @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane
      @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane Před 2 měsíci +4

      Ya' got that right!!

    • @barbarathompson7359
      @barbarathompson7359 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Yes! Dug down a foot and still found viable roots after 2 years of trying to kill it.

    • @kristinregine4798
      @kristinregine4798 Před 2 měsíci

      me too. @@barbarathompson7359

    • @robynearl6915
      @robynearl6915 Před 2 měsíci +6

      😂😂😂 I love my yucca! I think they are gorgeous in bloom ❤

    • @lindastraughn1193
      @lindastraughn1193 Před 2 měsíci

      @@barbarathompson7359 3 ft down x 2 ft wide finally took it out of commission.

  • @AnnieMahle
    @AnnieMahle Před 2 měsíci +94

    I'm so happy to hear you say you don't like Potentilla. I've been trying to love my shrubs for years and you have just given me permission to rip it out. Fabulous!!

    • @sallyloosli4379
      @sallyloosli4379 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I have one also, yellow flowering. Hate that bugger... it won't die..

    • @lm8006
      @lm8006 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Agree! So spindly for me…out it went!

    • @guntaweiland3428
      @guntaweiland3428 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Thanks for permission. My pathetic, spindly, potentilla - that I thought I would love - has seen it’s last spring. I hate it!

    • @amysgardenstead2879
      @amysgardenstead2879 Před 2 měsíci

      I had already decided to remove mine.

    • @kirstinerosenmeier428
      @kirstinerosenmeier428 Před 2 měsíci

      When I went the same route, year one in my garden, I was proud until my sister in law said, "Oh, that plant is so everywhere." Ouch.

  • @Christina-Ray
    @Christina-Ray Před měsícem +9

    Oh no not the beautiful day lilies! These are my favs!

  • @RK-hi7zz
    @RK-hi7zz Před 2 měsíci +19

    I call day lillies "gas station lillies". Here in Chicago suburbs, all gas stations have the stella d'oro yellow colored daylillies mass planted in beds by the curb! I don't feel like planting and growing it which in my mind is gas station decor😂

    • @Braedensground
      @Braedensground Před 2 měsíci +1

      Planted in red dyed mulch too. Yuck 🤮

    • @Braedensground
      @Braedensground Před 2 měsíci

      Planted in red dyed mulch too. Yuck 🤮

    • @TEPO--
      @TEPO-- Před 15 dny

      Me too, gas station flowers.
      Although to each is own as I do love the beauty of botanicals in all settings.....

    • @carollykins9475
      @carollykins9475 Před 11 dny

      Same here in ft. Wayne, we also have a lot of ditch lilies (the orange ones)

  • @jenniferchamberlain7462
    @jenniferchamberlain7462 Před 2 měsíci +332

    I’m with you on Daylilies.

    • @rebeccanisley8709
      @rebeccanisley8709 Před 2 měsíci +29

      The fancy daylilied are not thugs. They are beautiful and they clump not run.

    • @GoingGreenMom
      @GoingGreenMom Před 2 měsíci +10

      Ditch lilies from a friend. Lol. They are taking over so many other beds. Spearmint too. And oregano. Chives have spread super easy too.

    • @Lea-zf7lm
      @Lea-zf7lm Před 2 měsíci +18

      Prize daylilies like Rose F. Fitzgerald take years to get a good clump lol
      Most daylilies that sell in the $100+ range for a fan or two will never invade a garden. And their 11" blooms are a wonderful to behold. I also love the small ones like the Siloam range of daylilies. I have miniature ones that grow 4" tall. 😊

    • @willaerley7140
      @willaerley7140 Před 2 měsíci +8

      They work well on the woods edge.

    • @nikkistewart6767
      @nikkistewart6767 Před 2 měsíci +7

      Totally agree, no day lilies for me!

  • @marystarr4462
    @marystarr4462 Před 2 měsíci +88

    Oh Erin, I knew immediately what I am never growing again (and I tell my friends not to like some kind of disciple). TRUMPET VINE. My mother planted it more than 50 years ago, tried but never could get it to bloom, so years later I built a pergola, slipped it up over it, and it bloomed, and it grew and grew and grew. Everything under pergola had nasty dying orange spent blooms, it grew vines bigger than my thighs!!! I had a guy with a chain saw take it down to the ground, put vine and stump killer on the stumps, dug up roots as long as 30 feet.. 25 years later it's still coming up literally all over my yard including my cement drive at least 50 feet from where it was!!! Also have to include ornamental oregano...not that pretty and grew enormous in 1 season, that's gone.

    • @beverlysmith9854
      @beverlysmith9854 Před 2 měsíci +10

      I feel your pain, I had one that grew between the hinges of my gate and climbed my arbor, pushed the boards apart and grew underground runners everywhere. I thought I had dug it all out but then it started growing a vine up the side of my two story house climbing the brick. We moved now it's the new owners problem.🙂

    • @eviekleinwhittingham9237
      @eviekleinwhittingham9237 Před 2 měsíci +6

      Ha ha. Had the same problem. 😂

    • @patrickboylan5514
      @patrickboylan5514 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Trumpet vine is the worse! 15 years later and I still have roots that won't die!😆

    • @debilambert-nelson1233
      @debilambert-nelson1233 Před 2 měsíci +4

      This ...... grew it in New Jersey, over a little cottage shed in the middle of my backyard... ruined the roof of the shed with its weight and when I cut it back it popped up all over the yard.....Never again.

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Oh you poor thing!! I almost would have been a victim of this same vine, lucky I said no. My MIL had it growing and hers was also a giant stump and grew all along the foundation of the house. It would have took over here I’m sure. They are pretty in bloom and pollinators love them, but those greasy blossoms were a danger on the patio and yes, those shoots came up everywhere.
      And OMG-OREGANO! It does take over!

  • @allimisener3632
    @allimisener3632 Před 2 měsíci +16

    I spent three seasons digging every damn daylilly out of my property! I'm with you.

  • @missbee9140
    @missbee9140 Před měsícem +9

    I absolutely LOVE common daylilies!!! So beautiful!!

    • @steveneardley7541
      @steveneardley7541 Před 23 dny

      I planted some fancy daylilies, babied them, and they just didn't perform. Then I bought a 3-pack at Walmart. I discovered later that it was Frans Hals--old-fashioned form, three yellow petals interspaced with three orange petals with a red stripe. It grew three times better than any other daylily I had, and I've divided it a number of times. It has one flush of blooms, but always prolific. I like the simple orange ones too--a very pleasant color. I live in New Mexico, so nothing is invasive--well maybe Perovskia.

  • @deborahgraham1382
    @deborahgraham1382 Před 2 měsíci +31

    Boy Erin you really sparked conversation on this topic. We all have planted things that we wished we had not. You are right that we should only have plants in our garden that we love and get rid of those that we don't and don't feel guilty about it! Gardening should make us happy not regretful.

    • @n.w.414
      @n.w.414 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Lol, the trick is when the ‘other’ gardener in the house has differing tastes than you do on what plants they like.

  • @TheEarManLives
    @TheEarManLives Před 2 měsíci +4

    Morning glory, seeds everywhere.

  • @mcadoovicky6465
    @mcadoovicky6465 Před 13 dny +2

    Jupiters beard. I’ve never heard anything about these flowers except for in my yard. Took one of those garden house tours that you paid to go on and this lady had them and so I love them went and bought them at Home Depot for five bucks each. They are everywhere. They take over front yard backyard to dig them up. They have roots like big fat carrots so they’re not easy to get out. And you look at your ground and there are hundreds of little tiny plants that you’re constantly pulling out. The other thing that I planted is called purple rose locust tree. absolutely beautiful purple pink flowers but after that, they are a menace. I clean hundreds of leaves a day no matter what the season of course fall is the worst even though I live in San Diego. They have starters all over my yard that I constantly have to cut off dig out. I wish they would tell you this before you bought them.

  • @karafern.
    @karafern. Před měsícem +3

    That point about day lilies- it's so true! and it applies to all design mediums; if you don't like it, you don't have to live with it. I live in the Central Oregon high desert, and we're converting all of our landscaping to native plants, and there's so much Oregon Grape. Is it hearty? Yes. Does it have visual interest with its yellow flowers and burgundy leaves in the fall? Yes. Is it native? Yes. Do I like it? NO! the leaves are sharp, and I just think it's ugly. I wrestled with taking it out for so long, because it's adapted to here, but you know what else is? SO MANY OTHER NATIVE PLANTS! That I like! So now I'm gleefully removing it, and putting in things I think are beautiful, that are just as meant to be here. Live your own life, friends!

  • @lindseybennett3982
    @lindseybennett3982 Před měsícem +9

    Rose of Sharon. We had a neighbor that planted it once and it popped up all over our lawn, in our garden beds, even the window well for our basement. Lovely flowers but not worth the trouble!

    • @carollykins9475
      @carollykins9475 Před 11 dny

      I'm having that problem now! Digging them out all over the yard, and those roots go deep.

  • @lynnschantz9185
    @lynnschantz9185 Před 2 měsíci +13

    Sweet Woodruff takes over a bed in a few years, I pulled it all out last year.

  • @j3annie1963
    @j3annie1963 Před 2 měsíci +11

    anything in the mint or ajuga family, I will run from, it even moves into your grass and takes over the grass.

  • @steffd8822
    @steffd8822 Před měsícem +5

    And, like all gardeners, the ever open-to-future-possibilities of, "probably never". We're such optimists. 😆

  • @jillerdmann4598
    @jillerdmann4598 Před 2 měsíci +23

    I have killed every butterfly bush I’ve tried growing. Never again. My mom had a “flower” growing in her beds she called “Grandma’s Flower” because she got it from my dad’s mom (my grandma). She hated it because it was so invasive. My mom gave me a peony several years ago from her yard and who do you think came along for the ride? Grandma’s Flower - ugh! Lo and behold I’m watching this video and the very first “flower” you show is Grandma’s Flower! I got that peony from my mom probably 20 years ago and that %#+$& plant is still haunting me!

    • @summitsandy
      @summitsandy Před 2 měsíci +2

      I planted a Butterfly bush in my Zone 9b garden 2 years ago All of my other Buddlias thrive AND are very well behaved (if I prune them back hard once a year). BUT this white-flowered variety turned out to be a thug. By then end of its 2nd year it was 7' tall and had expanded into such a huge clump that when I finally removed it, I ended up with 13 good-size bushes. I put them in the "back 40" (no where near my nice gardens) on a large steep hill where I am hoping they will take over, suppress weeds, and bloom like crazy all summer long. If they escape into my neighbors property, their herd of goats will make short work of any potential problem!

    • @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane
      @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane Před 2 měsíci

      Some butterfly bushes are very invasive and will take over native areas, out competing native plants that supply insects for birds and mammals. NOT good!

  • @betsymaltby6788
    @betsymaltby6788 Před 2 měsíci +27

    As my garden matures, I realize there are so many better options for my limited space. Day lilies gone...replaced with anemones. Lily of the Valley, which took over and started eating my other plants, gone! Dug up the pips, covered with cardboard & mulch for one season...and it worked. Placed potted up containers on top for one season. Many years ago, planted chocolate mint...we all know how that went! 🙄🤣 Great video, your content is always timely.

    • @edanaestenes9656
      @edanaestenes9656 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I have those fall blooming anemones. They are monsters. Can't get rid of them. They spread and take over.

    • @betsymaltby6788
      @betsymaltby6788 Před 2 měsíci

      @@edanaestenes9656 mine spread as well, but I find them easy to dig up, divide and share. When everything is fizzling out late summer, I can always count on these flowers. I planted some shorter varieties last fall hoping they are more under control.

    • @mollie3244
      @mollie3244 Před měsícem +1

      @@edanaestenes9656 Lol, I was thinking the same thing, although they are much prettier and they do flower late

  • @stevenadair783
    @stevenadair783 Před 2 měsíci +7

    I love Coreopsis! Most of those native plants spread as they do in nature! I have a bunch of Cup Plant that spreads everywhere too, but I think the good outweighs the bad!

  • @loriesters7960
    @loriesters7960 Před měsícem +3

    Horsetail and sweet potato vine. They totally took my beds over

  • @maywattee
    @maywattee Před 2 měsíci +25

    Rose of sharon re seeds everywhere, Solomon seal is a thug and ditch/ tiger lillies never die and stop blooming after so many years in the same spot!

    • @debbiecoppolo3342
      @debbiecoppolo3342 Před 2 měsíci

      I have been pulling out Rose of Sharon that came from my neighbor's yard for 30 years!!!!

    • @kmsch986
      @kmsch986 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Ohh, good to know. Was about to buy a pretty one

    • @andrewgraves4026
      @andrewgraves4026 Před 2 měsíci

      Only double Rose of Sharon for me!

  • @miickeyp1695
    @miickeyp1695 Před 2 měsíci +52

    Ivy and I will never understand people that plant creeping Charlie on purpose!

    • @bethandrews7103
      @bethandrews7103 Před 2 měsíci +6

      I have been fighting with creeping Charlie for 5 years now. Why anyone would plant that is beyond me.

    • @CA-rx9ze
      @CA-rx9ze Před 2 měsíci +2

      Someone way up my street on the opposite side of the road long ago had ivy now the neighborhood has ivy. It pops up in our lawns and flower beds all the time.

    • @kylefishmoore
      @kylefishmoore Před 28 dny

      Ivy attracts rats to 🐀

    • @freyartz
      @freyartz Před 27 dny +2

      Creeping Charlie is my nemesis. Charlie and I have been at war. Sadly, he wins every year.

  • @maryanncuccio3705
    @maryanncuccio3705 Před 22 dny +3

    Somehow Star of Bethlehem popped up in my garden. I thought the flowers were so sweet. Within a few years the grassy texture of the leaves were popping up EVERYWHERE; even in the grass. I've been working towards eradicating it for years but it's definitely a work in process.

  • @tmontero8492
    @tmontero8492 Před 15 dny +4

    Please allow me to add 3 more disasters to your list:
    1) Leptospermum scoparium (Tea Tree), beautiful in bloom, but an unsightly naked mass of dead gray twigs for most of the year -- ripped it out in 6 months.
    2) Passion Flower, beautiful blooms, foliage, and delicious fruit. Without constant hard pruning, curly tendrils led its vines to dominate everything in sight, including neighbor's yards in just a few years.
    3) Viola papilionacea (Wood 10:22 Violet), adorable ground cover from local nursery. Little gremlins spread like wildfire, edging out a large radius of all other plants at an alarming rate. YEARS to eradicate, but continues to pop up from time to time. Thank for allowing me to vent.
    Agree 101% on daylilies! The blooms do not last long enough to justify the unsightly foliage. It took me forever to dig them all out of my garden.

  • @SMElder-iy6fl
    @SMElder-iy6fl Před 2 měsíci +19

    My hellebores are crowding out my Lily of the Valley, which never bloomed well anyway.

  • @LindaPaxton
    @LindaPaxton Před 2 měsíci +30

    Lemon balm! Put it the middle of a flower garden because I liked the smell. However, that thing spreads like crazy! Also love-in-a-mist. I really like it but it spreads like crazy too. I’m pulling out my daylilies this year just because they no longer “bring me joy” lol plus the deer eat all the blooms!

    • @rebeccalesueur8352
      @rebeccalesueur8352 Před 2 měsíci

      My lemon balm is in the shade and growing slowly & my dog eats any that comes into the fenced area where she plays. Not sure what I’m supposed to do about it when she passes on.

    • @lgarden7086
      @lgarden7086 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I have lemon balm in my garden but it’s in a container that’s below ground and that works.

    • @janeenclark8728
      @janeenclark8728 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Lemon Basil is wonderful!

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před 2 měsíci

      @@janeenclark8728trying that this year 👏🏼

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I didn’t know how lemon balm spreads. Grew it from seed, someone said it spreads. It LEAPS! It appears way away from original plant.

  • @debiulrey-crosby4520
    @debiulrey-crosby4520 Před 22 dny +3

    I am totally with you about creeping bellflower AND Lily of the Valley!

  • @georgeEW108
    @georgeEW108 Před měsícem +7

    My dad had a patch of Lilly of the valley. He dug, he sprayed, he cussed a lot. Oregon 8a east facing. It loved it there and didn’t want to leave. I have a clump of it that I wisely have not put in the ground.
    I have orange daylilies that you just gave me permission to dig out. I was sick of all of the work without much return. I have one that was from my dad, lemon lily, it has a small profile. When it's time to divide, I won't have guilt for getting rid of the excess. Thank you! 😉
    A variegated one I have wisely kept in a pot is Bishops weed/Smoke on the mountain. At my other place it took over! My neighbor has it everywhere. I'm not letting that genie out of the bottle again!
    I also have a vinca that might just go into a hanging pot or planter. I have very limited space here, and don't want to fight with it here. Another one that I love for texture and contrast is lambs ears. I'm keeping it trimmed, but it may become invasive too.
    Thanks for permission! On the morrow the daylilies meet their fate. 😂

  • @amy010276
    @amy010276 Před 2 měsíci +10

    Personally I like to think of daylilies as an ornamental grass that occasionally gets pretty blooms on it.😊

  • @Ezekiel38Matthew24
    @Ezekiel38Matthew24 Před 2 měsíci +43

    Lily of the valley has a beautiful fragrance...

    • @jcbfree
      @jcbfree Před 2 měsíci +4

      I really love the smell of them. Do you think they are safe to plant in a pot and put on a cement driveway?

    • @Ezekiel38Matthew24
      @Ezekiel38Matthew24 Před 2 měsíci +8

      @@jcbfree absolutely....the fragrance "Miss Dior" comes from Lily if the valley. I live in a high rise and grow them.

    • @pansepot1490
      @pansepot1490 Před 2 měsíci +12

      I live in Europe and had never any problems with them. They were in a bed with a cement rim on all sides between the driveway and the house. I used the lilies of the valley as ground cover under hydrangeas so I could have flowers early and later on the hydrangeas took over.
      Difficult to generalize because each plant, each situation and each need is different, but unless you like to have a collection of different plants and instead need just to green up a difficult spot, a thuggish plant can be a solution.
      I personally have given up growing plants that need coddling and cosseting. Self seeders and spreaders that do all the work by themselves and just need some containment once in a while are my favorite. 😅

  • @obyvatel
    @obyvatel Před 2 měsíci +9

    If I stopped yanking maple saplings out I would be living in a dark maple forest because of the seed production of one mature tree. If I stopped cutting wisteria the maple forest would be woven through with wisteria vine. The blackberry and the honeysuckle wouldn't care, they would find a way, and so would the bamboo which just grows as tall as it has to, which now that I think of it is also what the cherry laurel does.

    • @dougr.2245
      @dougr.2245 Před měsícem

      I've lived every one of these. The maple tree is gone now, but I'm pulling up oak seedlings from a tree two houses away. I've got wisteria under control, but almost no flowers if it can't have it's own way. I completely removed honeysuckle, but it took years of persistence, the same with bamboo; years of watching & pulling out every shoot, but I won. Cherry laurel took over a third of my yard, but it's gone now & I'm starting over.

    • @obyvatel
      @obyvatel Před měsícem +1

      @@dougr.2245 I have the impression that jays spread acorns. I get oaks all along a fence and close to hedges and under trees. Cherry laurel turns out to burn very well in the fireplace and it is actually quite strong and durable. I heard that the way to get rid of the bamboo was to let the stalk grow and when it unfurls its leaves cut it down to the ground. If you just cut the shoot when it's first visible there will still be a lot of energy left in the root to regrow.

    • @dougr.2245
      @dougr.2245 Před měsícem

      @@obyvatel I've been burning the cherry laurel all winter. You are right, it's good firewood. To get rid of bamboo, I cut it all to the ground after it started growing in spring. Shoots inevitably appeared & I pulled them out (not just cut the top) as deep as I could without killing myself for another two years. Without nourishment the underground runners eventually died off. By the third spring there were almost no shoots & the few that tried were easily removed. Now the area is replanted as a flower bed.

  • @bctrissel
    @bctrissel Před měsícem +5

    Improved day lilies take ages to form a decent clump and are beautiful when they bloom. Huge difference between them and the takeover kind.

  • @ladikmk
    @ladikmk Před 2 měsíci +29

    Myosotis - Blue Forget-Me-Nots. My Mom gifted me with some (and Lily of the Valley) years ago, and I have NEVER forgotten what a royal pain those plants were. Ajuga and Liriope are the worst thugs ever. Barberry - I wouldn't plant it again if someone paid me to take it. Silver Maples are a very real hazard unless you're planting them out in the back forty so they won't land on your roof or try to enter your sewer lines and destroy your basement. Muscari Grape Hyacinth - once you've planted it, it's there forever.

    • @saraw8503
      @saraw8503 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I planted Japanese anemone and in just a single season it has spread from one p,ate to about thirty.

    • @sonjabutler250
      @sonjabutler250 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Interesting. I have grape hyacinth from a neighbor and like it but now feel warned.
      💯 re: Barberry. That is a devil plant I’m sure.

    • @amy010276
      @amy010276 Před 2 měsíci +2

      There are two types of liriope. You need to get the clumping kind.

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Oh no! I just planted forget me nots! This fall I was gathering other flower seeds and realized that there were seeds clinging to my sleeve-Ugh! I bet those are the seed aren’t they? That’s why they have the name I bet. We will see if they return-scared.
      Lol, silver maples-Big Hell No! My sister had one and lifted their driveway and sidewalk and had to Shovel the whirligigs. And it was feet from foundation so good they cut it down.
      We had a lilac get into sewer lines.
      Oh, and grape hyacinths-just get a vole and they will be gone 😅but then you will have to get rat trap and peanut butter to get the voles😅
      And I was picked one too many times by barberry.
      And OMG-Bugleweed/Ajuga! I Never planted it! It just showed up and when I seen how it was clearing out thick turf grass my eyes got Wide 😮-I’m not sure but I think I got it all. Phew! 😮‍💨

    • @claybakin2478
      @claybakin2478 Před 2 měsíci

      Ohhh 😔 I’ve been trying to seed Forgets and they won’t take. I gave up and installed Brunnera plants. I guess I dodged a bullet? I have 4 silver maples planted by previous owner. WHY?!!! 😭 3 are in my backyard and too costly to have taken down. Grass won’t grow beneath them so we’ve mulched the entire HUGE area and put in a gravel patio. I’ve planted ajuga and Ivy Gold Child beneath them. What else could I do? I love how the ivy climbs the trees, very slowly, and it’s not a terror like Boston Ivy. I have Spanish bluebells carpeting the soil under them now, soon to be coming into bloom. I think most plants (but not all - Tree of Heaven I’m talking to YOU) have their place.

  • @cavumine
    @cavumine Před 2 měsíci +22

    I'm with you on the daylilies but for another reason: the deer eat the heck out of them; I so rarely get to see a bloom! I chucked many of them into the compost pile, and they come up, but no blooms. It no longer irritates me quite so much. The same goes for Hostas because the all-night-deer-buffet is unchecked. The other plant I won't grow again is Photinia. I had to cut out 4 really big ones because an aggressive fungus consumed them. Roses have begun to annoy me pretty badly, too; the maintenance, and the creatures that like the eat them, are starting to eclipse the joy I get out of their blooms. (I hate Japanese Beetles!)

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před 2 měsíci

      Ugh! JAPANESE BEETLES!! They ruin everything! I got a bad skin infection from a bite. We put up traps well away from garden and we can at least go outside without them going down our shirts and in our hair!! I know the traps can attract them, but I’m getting a ton of them as we change full bags out all summer. Stopping the reproduction! I use Milky Spore everywhere also and we have less of them now.
      They still find my roses😤 but I did figure out that they don’t attack bush green beans only the pole varieties. Win!
      And yes, the deer think day lilies are bon bons. 😠. I have to fence Everything.

    • @JS-jl1yj
      @JS-jl1yj Před 2 měsíci +1

      I hate Japanese Beetles too. They used to mate like crazy in my raspberry patch during harvest time and then lay their eggs in my lawn. And then the racoons dug patches of the grass to get to the grubs. I started applying beneficial nematodes at the end of April and beginning of October, five years in a row, till I finally got rid of them. But there is no guarantee that they will not find their way back into my backyard.

  • @EllaWeeks-ux1vg
    @EllaWeeks-ux1vg Před 15 dny +2

    Wisteria, I have been pull runners from the plant for ever.

    • @MisterPerson-fk1tx
      @MisterPerson-fk1tx Před 13 dny

      I'm told I'm going to hate it but it looks like i have to learn the hard way. Fell in love with it traveling Asia and now it's in the ground here as of last year.

  • @dwoodbury
    @dwoodbury Před 2 měsíci +29

    Day lilies, definitely. Last winter, the deer dug up and ate most of the day lilies -- roots and all -- that my great-aunt had planted in our yard fifty years ago, and I was grateful, as I've never had the heart to remove them myself.

  • @Georgeous.Garden
    @Georgeous.Garden Před 2 měsíci +32

    Clustered bellflower-gorgeous saturated dark purple blooms captivated me, but it had plans to take over the world. It was in cahoots with my lily of the valley I’m fairly sure.😂

    • @LetThePumpkinsFLY
      @LetThePumpkinsFLY Před 2 měsíci

      My bellflowers always die!

    • @mollie3244
      @mollie3244 Před měsícem

      @@LetThePumpkinsFLY Ya, I need to mind mine a bit, helps if you put in at least five of them together. I think they like the room but never every thought they could be a problem eh. Has to be the local climate.

  • @lisak161
    @lisak161 Před 2 měsíci +30

    I actually bought Chameleon plant at a garden center 😳 After seeing it taking over my garden bed the next year, I then spent 5 getting rid of it🤨 IYKYK

    • @TheImpatientGardener
      @TheImpatientGardener  Před 2 měsíci +6

      Oh yeah! That’s one I wish they wouldn’t sell at garden centers.

    • @lorrigierman7089
      @lorrigierman7089 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Ditto! Amazed that they actually still sell it at the garden center! Not sure it is even possible to get rid of it.

    • @patriceg1100
      @patriceg1100 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Me too, I am on year 10 of trying to get rid of it. Horrible plant.

    • @lightwavz
      @lightwavz Před 2 měsíci +3

      The smell of it makes me so nauseous. It worked wonders for a relative who gardened on a rocky slope, but, man, it STANK!

    • @vlink4071
      @vlink4071 Před 2 měsíci

      Have you had any luck getting rid of it? I thought I did after 5 years of working at it, but it is up again! I don’t like the pachysandra and lily of the valley taking over, but I really just have no appreciation for Crape Myrtle. I just don’t like it.

  • @vcherylcollins6290
    @vcherylcollins6290 Před 2 měsíci +15

    Cone flower! 1-2-3 strikes you're out. I just can't waste any more time and money on these plants. Love them, but the feeling is not mutual! Loved this video. And I agree. Everyone has the grace to love or dislike a particular plant for whatever reason.

    • @lynnbrowning3872
      @lynnbrowning3872 Před 2 měsíci +4

      I too love the new echinacea and have spent hundreds of dollars only to have about 6 plants surviving not thriving!!!

    • @lynnbrowning3872
      @lynnbrowning3872 Před 2 měsíci

      If anyone can give us advice on echinacea especially the new bright colored ones!???

    • @lisa5249
      @lisa5249 Před 2 měsíci +2

      The doubles don’t seem to be as hardy as the singles I noticed

    • @jodiv2928
      @jodiv2928 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I love coneflower especially for the pollinators. My biggest issue is I cannot keep rabbits away from eating them. :(

    • @user-xn3xn8hq6f
      @user-xn3xn8hq6f Před 2 měsíci

      @@lynnbrowning3872 Too bad I have lots of them, They reseed and are so tough. Hot dry weather and fairly poor soil is my situation in Georgia.

  • @rhondaduncan7602
    @rhondaduncan7602 Před 2 měsíci

    Amen on the daylilies, Erin! !!! Beautiful flowers to admire in SOMEONE ELSE'S garden!

  • @deniselevesque5317
    @deniselevesque5317 Před 2 měsíci +40

    Haha. I had the SAME THING happen with Daylilies! I bought so many varieties and a couple years on I admitted I didn’t like them, I didn’t want them, took me another years before we broke up. Sorry daylily it’s me not you.

    • @vtgardener5327
      @vtgardener5327 Před 2 měsíci +8

      Same here! I used to have SO MANY daylilies and then wondered why by late summer my garden looked so brown and dead. Every year now I cull out many varieties and am finally down to just a few. These will remain for now as they were gifts from my father and uncle (both gone now) and are tied to happy memories.

    • @MyFocusVaries
      @MyFocusVaries Před 2 měsíci +1

      It's not you! It's them. So meh.

  • @denisekeeney6288
    @denisekeeney6288 Před 2 měsíci +66

    Tossed my head back and laughed when you said "I have killed three Redbuds"
    I planted English Ivy, it was a gift from my neighbor. A huge chunk of root ball. Think, thirty year woody vine war

    • @wildjane2010
      @wildjane2010 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Haha I laugh because I laughed at myself. My mother in law had it and of course I wanted some. It was beautiful except her house was brick and mine wood. Uggh.

    • @jessieyork4508
      @jessieyork4508 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I have some along my back fence line. It was here when I bought the house 4 years ago. It was taking over everything. I'm still fighting it

    • @kasiacholewinska
      @kasiacholewinska Před 2 měsíci +1

      Same here 🙈

    • @nikkistewart6767
      @nikkistewart6767 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I just bought my house 6 months ago and there is a large section in my back yard with some kind of ivy and I don't like it at all! I am in the process of finding someone to remove it all and I know it will be a chore because it's all up my fence too!

    • @ZePopTart
      @ZePopTart Před 2 měsíci +1

      Nonono the aerial roots…. With their grabby little death hands 🫡🫡🫡

  • @jeffbstrong
    @jeffbstrong Před 2 měsíci

    Funny and honest. Thanks

  • @carmenbailey1560
    @carmenbailey1560 Před 2 měsíci

    Lessons are learnt quite quickly. 👍❤️🙂

  • @GoodShepherdBandFan
    @GoodShepherdBandFan Před 2 měsíci +12

    I grew up in southern Indiana where redbuds ran wild and were the pinnacle of spring. Now in I'm in Minnesota, zone 4b, and am determined to grow cold tolerant varieties to recapture some of that magic. I'm just not ready to give up just yet.

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před 2 měsíci

      I’m concerned as last fall I planted 3 of forest and flame thrower. Always seen redbuds in other yards. Company said they would grow here in Z5a, WI. I think I read there are native redbuds but never seen them. Hope they live as they are beautiful.
      As you know our last two winters have been warm. If they do live I wonder if they will if it turns cold again.

  • @SteveL2012
    @SteveL2012 Před 2 měsíci +4

    We totally understand (but won’t hold you to it)! ❤

  • @msturn1975
    @msturn1975 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Oxalis-purple shamrock! Still comes up 25 years later.

    • @mollie3244
      @mollie3244 Před měsícem

      Also the green one, actually all oxalis. Tiny little bulbs get everywhere

  • @sylviaerb2289
    @sylviaerb2289 Před 2 měsíci +6

    Morning Glory. It's a beautiful deep purple. But im fighting it every year

    • @sandrakrueger910
      @sandrakrueger910 Před 2 měsíci

      I foolishly grew purple morning glories from seed 30 years ago. It masively tangles its way into everything. And it produces tons of seeds that find their way into every nook and cranny. It's a war that I can't win.

  • @SMElder-iy6fl
    @SMElder-iy6fl Před 2 měsíci +10

    This video was fun!

  • @VanLaarDesigns
    @VanLaarDesigns Před 2 měsíci +12

    Siberian Iris. I was given a single tiny tuber by a "friend" and three years later it's absolutely massive, crowding out all other perennials anywhere near it. I'm sure it's lovely where it has space to roam, but my small garden is not the place for it. Also Silene Vulgaris, inherited a garden where it was planted and have been battling it for years.

    • @christinemalnati9440
      @christinemalnati9440 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Got rid of mine last summer for just reason. It’s a lot of work to divide these. Bearded iris are only ones I will grow as they are easily controlled and divided.

  • @brockreynolds870
    @brockreynolds870 Před měsícem +17

    I collect daylilies, and LOVE them, The foliage can get a little ratty late in the summer, but I just groom them. The best thing to do with daylilies is to plant spring flowering bulbs in between them, they bloom before the daylilies get tall, and then the daylilies cover up the dying foliage of the bulbs. Perfect combo. And they do NOT require dividing. The only flower that requires that is iris. Dayliliy, Hosta, can remain in place for decades without the bloom being reduced. The species, Hemerocallis fulva (orange tiger liliy) will spread everywhere, as opposed to the fancy hybrids, which are just clump forming... BUT it has it's purpose!! I am a landscape contractor and plant it all the time, it works beautifully for erosion control on steep banks, or in areas where you need something that is tough as nails, like median islands with no irrigation. For isntance, I planted it for a customer that had a 30 degree slope between his driveway and his neighbors, too steep to mow, only 6 foot wide, completely surrounded by asphalt on all 4 sides. It worked beautifully, held the ground from washing away, choked out all weeds, and is VERY low maintinence. So the species has it's place, just not in a mixed flower bed.

    • @christyconatser9823
      @christyconatser9823 Před 26 dny +1

      Thank you for saying this. I have a patch of naturalized daylilies on the back of my property. My problem is they do not grow to full size nor do they bloom. I don't know the reason for this (lack of light or nutrition... many things have happened around them over the years) but I dug some up and planted them elsewhere and some are blooming this year. I have a steep ditch that gets overgrown with weeds and briars. I was considering putting the daylilies in the ditch just for the reasons you mentioned. Glad to know that just might work.

    • @richardeidemiller6739
      @richardeidemiller6739 Před 24 dny

      They may not require dividing for bloom but the clumps become massive if you don't divide certain ones. I've been a plant collector and gardener for many years and love certain daylilies but some I got rid of due to the space they took up becoming clumps ridiculously large. Vicki

    • @colleensmith3374
      @colleensmith3374 Před 21 dnem

      I agree… here in Colorado. I’ve never done anything to my day Lily’s & they’re beautiful. Great tip about planting bulbs in between.

  • @daisypeony66
    @daisypeony66 Před 2 měsíci +11

    Pretty much agree with all. I only plant Zagreb Coreopsis, ALL the others stink! They die, they spread, they look awful. Zagreb is a tried and true cultivar. Hate Potentilla. I use St Johns Wort in my designs instead. I'm a huge daylily fan but you are so right. If you don't like a plant, don't have it!! Some plants I won't grow: Sedum (we have a wilt disease in Illinois soils that will wipe them out, they flop, they are ugly), Roses. Yes I said it. PITB!!! The Japanese beetles attack them 24/7 and I'm tired of trying to keep blooms on so I ripped them all out. Buddleia. Doesn't survive our winters and I'm done replanting every year. Hellebores. Hate them lol! All their flowers point down and it's like the plant is giving me the cold shoulder. Don't understand the hype AT ALL! Salvia and Cat's Pajamas catmint. I no longer have any Salvia and ripped out the one insanely expensive CP catmint because they bloomed for a couple weeks and then done. Gotta do better than that in my yard! I have Walker's Low and love every single day of blooms it gives me without fail, alllll season long! That's most of them. Thankfully there are millions I do love and enjoy in the garden!!

    • @tylerk.7947
      @tylerk.7947 Před 2 měsíci

      Walkers low is a real powerhouse. I’ve had the same experience with cats pajamas, and any small catmint varieties

  • @user-ui7ib6wg9k
    @user-ui7ib6wg9k Před 2 měsíci +11

    Purple passion Vine period even my neighbors hate me for this one.

    • @patriceg1100
      @patriceg1100 Před 2 měsíci

      My neighbors passion vine was killing my dogwood. They took it out and the dogwood recovered.

  • @meluvsquki
    @meluvsquki Před 2 měsíci +9

    I despise barberry bushes. I moved into an old home two years ago, that had 17(!) very mature, overgrown barberry bushes. Absolutely massive with the prickliest thorns, the thin needle like ones that'd be an absolute pain to get out if were to get stuck inside your fingertips. My FIL at my request to remove them instead decided to trim them. Releasing countless, short & thorny cuttings all over into my largest bed. I still get stuck by some of the leftover trimmings and I curse him every time. I've cut down most of the bushes, killed them with herbicide, or dug out smaller ones but some of them still come back. When the bush does die, the remaining roots will throw up a smaller plant a few feet away. I caaaaaaaant with these plants.

    • @willaerley7140
      @willaerley7140 Před 2 měsíci

      Agreed. Hideous. Might as well plant raspberries (but don’t) and get fruit.

    • @tishatucker7207
      @tishatucker7207 Před 2 měsíci

      They are awful!!! Previous owners planted several and allowed them to spread like crazy. Plus the are homes to ticks!! We have hundreds of them in our wooded area and I'm slowly trying to get rid of them. It's gonna be a 10 year process I'm sure 😢

    • @johnsonDonna
      @johnsonDonna Před 2 měsíci

      😢

  • @marthabourassa7909
    @marthabourassa7909 Před 2 měsíci

    I’m totally with you on day lillies for pretty much the same reasons as you. I banished them from my garden years ago, but I’m still digging them out!

  • @carriekutchins7188
    @carriekutchins7188 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Here in coastal California near Tomales Bay the climate is mild so plants don't have to fight very hard to survive. I've been gardening in the same spot long enough to have all my mistakes come home to roost, some of them forever. For some plants all it took was one plant to take over three acres of forest. This is the list of plants that I would never plant again:
    Geranium x cantabrigianse 'Biokovo'/ Campanula of any kind / white Calla Lillies / Periwinkle any kind / mexican Daisy / violets / English lawn daisies. Not planted by me but invasive in my area in the extreme: Cestris and Ivy of any kind. Thanks for sharing your list and encouragement to get rid of plants that we don't like.

  • @BH-gr2ds
    @BH-gr2ds Před 2 měsíci +17

    I guess it's all relative. Growing plants in the far north has many challenges, so we tend to appreciate plants for a variety of reasons. Beauty is only one of them. #1: If it survives here, it needs to be considered! That being said, here is a list of plants that I made the mistake of planting and have spent years eradicating: Goutweed, aka Bishop's weed. It's super invasive, thrives in ANY condition and it takes forever to totally eradicate it, even in my area, and that's saying a lot! Lily of the valley, I love the look and scent, but it's also too invasive, and almost impossible to get rid of. Wild orange daylilies, aka ditch lilies - made the mistake of accepting a box of tubers from someone digging up their back yard. (Should have seen the red flags there) Next to impossible to get rid of. I love the other daylilies though, and have 100s of them. To me, they're worth the effort because I've hybridizied many of these myself for plants that can survive our harsh winters and bloom well in my environment. Coneflower: love it. By the time it looks bad, the snow is flying, so don't care. Potentillas: I have some because it's a shrub that survives our winters. I use them as a means to trap additional snow on my flower gardens in winter, thus adding protection for the perennials I do value. Creeping thyme: planted some 30 years ago, and have been trying to get rid of it ever since. Others I don't love: Golden Sedum, Johnny jump ups, portulaca, calendula. They self sow too freely.

    • @CA-rx9ze
      @CA-rx9ze Před 2 měsíci +2

      Similar climate and also do rely on daylily and coneflowers. I did johnny jump up and he will jump up and pop up all over.

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I was in the same thought-if it can survive this sandy severe drought area it gets a place. Well I’ve mentioned in comments my experiences, but I do like moss roses and was surprised they made a home in my veg garden.
      That golden sedum sounds like what was called ‘Steppables’ here and it’s almost impossible to get out of the lawn. It’s hideous. And I’m hoping the calendula does come back as it really survives frost better than marigolds and these kind of plants are easy to remove because they spread by seed. Those other things with rhizomes are awful.

  • @shirlenehigbie5677
    @shirlenehigbie5677 Před 2 měsíci +5

    I am in total agreement with you on the Day Lilies .... !!!!

  • @joannab483
    @joannab483 Před 2 měsíci

    Can totally appreciate your stance. We all have different tastes and what were willing to take care of which is 1000% ok. Taking care of some things may be enjoyable and others not. The more open we are to discuss, the better and maybe come across tips or applications.... Etc.

  • @pamsmith7369
    @pamsmith7369 Před měsícem +4

    Houttuynia- sold as a ground cover- just looked it up for the spelling as it’s tricky- it’s marketed as a short-lived plant and if you want it to self-seed, just don’t mow it till it flowers!
    HA HA HA! I put it in my front garden and literally had to pull it up every fall; the whole garden! It took over every square inch!
    What a job! And it smells funny!
    And, even though I pulled it all up, it came back every year and filled the WHOLE GARDEN-EVERY SQUARE INCH!

    • @Artemisgrier
      @Artemisgrier Před měsícem

      YES! I hate it! (Did you know it’s edible?)

    • @maryannegiangregorio2162
      @maryannegiangregorio2162 Před měsícem

      Also called chameleon plant! Don't plant in the ground!

    • @pamsmith7369
      @pamsmith7369 Před měsícem

      It smells a little citrusy but kind of like a solvent, as well.

  • @jillette7490
    @jillette7490 Před 2 měsíci +29

    Virginia Creeper. The homeowner before us planted it along our fence, which it completely ruined, and the fencing company took a full extra day to replace our fence because the roots were so woody and thick several feet down. I went to the mattresses fighting back volunteers for years before and since, and they still pop up 5 years on. I hate it with the heat of a thousand suns.

    • @mavisjones4750
      @mavisjones4750 Před 2 měsíci

      I don't know where it came from but that and ivy are back in the the woods that is on my side of the subdivision. For some dang reason, I assumed the creeper was poison ivy until I looked it up last year on Google Lens. Every year since putting fence up and the later installing garden beds, every summer it's a war between me and the vines creeping under the fence. The creeper is up in a tree in the woods but the tree and the creeper hang over the top of the fence.

    • @anngarnett4390
      @anngarnett4390 Před 2 měsíci

      Virginia creeper became such a Japanese beetle magnet. I had to rip it out. Not sad about that. 😆

    • @tylerk.7947
      @tylerk.7947 Před 2 měsíci

      But that fall color!!😂😂😂

    • @taravamos2954
      @taravamos2954 Před měsícem

      It could have been “planted” by birds instead of the previous homeowner

    • @mollie3244
      @mollie3244 Před měsícem

      Lol, I think I love it as much a you hate it. I have it growing through a long ratty old hedge and for most of the year it's completely gorgeous.

  • @douellette7960
    @douellette7960 Před 2 měsíci +58

    Beware the friend, neighbor, relative that presents you with a 'gift' from their garden. Ask yourself why are they are sharing it and why it was so easy for them to propagate!

    • @EvelynM-vlogs
      @EvelynM-vlogs Před 2 měsíci +3

      I agree, but I also ask myself, "why do neighbours or friends give away problem plants, just why"?

    • @origamistigri976
      @origamistigri976 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Un grand classique de la fausse generosité ! Cela me rappelle ma voisine qui me disait sans mauvaise conscience aucune quand elle me proposait ses rhysomes de Canna :" J'allais le jeter mais si vous le voulez... "

    • @carmenbailey1560
      @carmenbailey1560 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Yes,yes and yes 😊

    • @cmnr8487
      @cmnr8487 Před 2 měsíci +8

      I have shared many iris, hostas, and daffodil bulbs. Why? Because they grow well for me and every few years I divide them and share them with my friends. Not everyone is 'out to get you'.

    • @douellette7960
      @douellette7960 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@cmnr8487 Yes obviously there are exceptions. You misinterpreted the comment. Beware means to be cautious. Neighbors should be alert to negative consequences of 'gift' plants and know what you're getting before planting. Everyone would agree with that including you.

  • @marieweber4579
    @marieweber4579 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I totally agree with you about the lily of the valley.

  • @LauraGrice-ss6de
    @LauraGrice-ss6de Před 2 měsíci

    You're the best. Love your honesty ❤️

  • @threegardens604
    @threegardens604 Před 2 měsíci +8

    I agree with all of those! If I had to pick one though, it would be Lily of the Valley. I can remember my grandma grew it wild on a hill. To this day whenever I smell it, it brings me back to my childhood. That smell is Iike no other!

  • @annmariea2910
    @annmariea2910 Před 2 měsíci +4

    Great talk and you had me laughing! Mimosa tree from a seed a friend gave me. Living here in Charlotte North Carolina in zone 8a. I chopped down the tree 5 years ago and the roots still come popping up every year! So invasive. Top of my list of regrets!

  • @moonflowers72
    @moonflowers72 Před 2 měsíci +5

    I spent 4 hours digging up day lilies yesterday. The previous owner of my house planted them, and I will never choose to have them in my garden because they are basically a weed in my eyes.

  • @Buehr99
    @Buehr99 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Yes beware when people "gift" you plants. I have pulled out snow on the mountain for many years as well as lily of the valley. Lamium horrible spreader. I planted it on a hillside and that was a huge mistake trying to eradicate it. I spent 2 years trying to remove the plain old day lilies. Ugh! Ferns spread by rhizomes. Nope! We all live and learn when it comes to plants. I have now done more homework before planting things. Thanks Erin.

  • @Carol_Hinze
    @Carol_Hinze Před 2 měsíci +6

    OMG! I am so on the same Daylily page with you! I have been fighting with myself for YEARS wanting to get rid of mine. Nice in the spring, don’t re-flower all that well and then the foliage just looks like crap. I spend more time pulling out the dead leaves than any other chore. I swear there is some worm or insect which feeds on the roots. I live on the north side of Lake Ontario, Zone 5B (Canada hasn’t updated our heartiness zones in years so who knows, likely a 6B now lol) and the leaves are just coming through nicely…..but their days are numbered! My beds are part sun/shade so I think I will just replace them with some interesting hostas. Love your channel and your common sense approach to gardening!

  • @hd1ab1
    @hd1ab1 Před 2 měsíci +10

    Star of Bethlehem bulbs are one of my biggest nemesis. I've given up in one garden. I let it come up, bloom and then it disappears until next year.
    Second, spider wort. I'm down to one clump, but it pops up in areas that aren't even close to the mother plant.
    I agree, every gardener has their own list!! Maryland, Zone 7.

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před 2 měsíci

      Just when I thought I mentioned all the problematic plants you bring up Spiderwort! Fully agree!

  • @Talk2MeAboutTX
    @Talk2MeAboutTX Před měsícem

    Luv the commentary and info. 👏👏👏

  • @bobbiwithane
    @bobbiwithane Před 2 měsíci +1

    Hahahaha! Good chat. 😂 Definitely agree on all those. I was also sucked into creeping bellflower last year (pretty) so I will keep an eye but see it wildly growing in people’s gardens around here. Been there with daily Lillie’s too. Still trying but agree. A lot for little. Same with Iris. Stunning blooms early (first ones to bloom for me) but then nothing for the majority of the season. And boxwoods. I’m sick of winter kill or blight or whatever only to keep having to replace them. Done with trying to have a nice little boxwood hedge around hydrangeas. I will leave it to the pros. And I inherited Lilly of the valley but moved it to beside my shed and cedars and doesn’t take off at all. Still same little bit 🤷‍♀️.

  • @gaylagenecarder4343
    @gaylagenecarder4343 Před 2 měsíci +17

    Black eyed Susan’s. I’m digging up the original plant from 5 years ago. Every year, it’s the battle. It’s a bully plant and you can’t control it except in a container. 😊

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Here they aren’t hard to pull, but yes, they scatter. The variety I have get mildew depending on where they are located.

    • @thereseboogades8498
      @thereseboogades8498 Před 2 měsíci

      Good to know!

    • @carolbrandt6672
      @carolbrandt6672 Před měsícem +1

      One good thing is that the rabbits like to eat them. That is rubecia

    • @bonniebecker3254
      @bonniebecker3254 Před 13 dny +1

      I love my black-eyed susan but my deer eat them down when I forget to protect them. I usually cover them with dark green tulle.

    • @thereseboogades8498
      @thereseboogades8498 Před 12 dny +1

      Great Info! There are so many cool varieties in the Rudbeckia family. Sounds like using pots is the trick here.😂

  • @rspruill1422
    @rspruill1422 Před 2 měsíci +6

    Hi Erin. I'm Robyn, I garden in NJ 7b. I was gifted a "weed" and that weed is on your list DAYLILY! The person that gave it to me a lovely Gardner, didn't know what kind of daylily it was. I graciously accepted grew it in a pot till it was big enough that I can divide it for a couple years. I research a little bit on how to take care of daylilies it didn't seem that high maintenance. I noticed last summer something growing along the lawn edge that looked very similar to a young daylily it was almost 3 feet away from the clump of daylily! Then in there I did hard research and I found that what I have is called a ditch Lily! I started digging them up last Fall. I've given some away told the person "buyer beware" 😈 they still accepted it but a lot of them I'm sorry I just threw in the trash. I put them in a double plastic bag and threw it in the trash. I still have some more but I know for the next few years I'm gonna be digging them up it's hard to get those little potato looking yam roots!

  • @vintagebloom9577
    @vintagebloom9577 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I used to have a neighbor that had Caryopteris (bluebeard) shrub and always thought it was stunning. But then I had the bright idea of planting two in my full sun bank bed and 2 years later, yes only 2 years I have pulled them both out! Although when in flower they are quite appealing; they are also a bully and any branch that touches the ground roots. Truly surprised I went this route after fighting with old fashioned butterfly bushes on a former property. If my mom was on here she would say for her it would be muscari (grape hyacinths). She has been pulling them out of her front garden beds for the last 10 years.
    great content Erin