If you're looking to purchase native plants for your area, try to pick a supplier in the same seed zone that you are in. US forest service has a webmap to use to help you. Just click the webmap link on the following page and click your area.
fs.usda.gov/wwetac/Seedzonemap

Locally grown is always best though.

Follow up to planting native species....make sure not to plant invasive species. Click your state for a list of what to stay away from or eradicate in your area:
invasivespeciesinfo.gov/subjec


Follow

@Kurtroedeger Seriously. I knew mugwort could be invasive but have never seen any around here. I saw a ton in NYC, took a tiny one and put it in a cup on my hotel room window. Brought it home, but it was obvs sickly, so I thought, "Hey, I'll plant it for just the fall before I put it in a pot." It took over a year to get all the mugwort out of my yard. It grew way higher than it did in NY when I took another trip. Pulling it up wasn't enough, I had to smother the light for months.

Sign in to participate in the conversation

CounterSocial is the first Social Network Platform to take a zero-tolerance stance to hostile nations, bot accounts and trolls who are weaponizing OUR social media platforms and freedoms to engage in influence operations against us. And we're here to counter it.