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![Virginia spring beauty (Claytonia virginica)](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/spring-beauties-702x526.jpg)
Virginia Spring Beauty – Claytonia virginica
When I reach my limit with the bleakness of winter and cold temperatures, the tiniest pink striped flowers start to poke their heads out of lawns and ditches. To me, the Virginia spring beauty (Claytonia virginica) is a harbinger of spring and warmer weather. These wildflowers bloom just before the false garlic – so they […]
![Turks Cap](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/turks-cap5-702x526.jpg)
Turk’s Cap – Malvaviscus arboreus var. drummondii
Turk’s cap is a perennial, deciduous, shrub-like plant native to the Southeastern United States. It produces small (2-3 inch) red flowers that resemble a closed-up hibiscus. You may also find pink and white flowered cultivars of this plant. This plant is in the Malvaceae family; Turk’s cap is also commonly known as wax mallow, Texas […]
![](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/carolina-anemone-665x526.jpg)
To Find a Windflower
Although I’ve lived in Mississippi for a long time off and on, there are many of our state’s wildflowers that I still haven’t seen. There are so many beautiful surprises in the woods, lawns, and roadsides of Mississippi. We just have to look for them. As I was walking through a nearby neighborhood in March, […]
![sensitive briar, a low growing trailing plant with bright small pink pompom type flowers](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/sensitive-briar-702x526.jpg)
This amazing native plant actually moves when you touch it
If you haven’t been introduced to this tiny plant with fuzzy little pink flowers, you are missing out. It might not be much to look at, but sensitive briar does something pretty amazing. It moves. By itself. No, really. Sensitive briar – Mimosa spp. There are several species in the genus Mimosa that share the […]
![Cast iron plant flower](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/cast-iron-600x526.jpg)
The Unique (and Rare) Flowers of the Cast Iron Plant
I adore plants. So when I had the opportunity to salvage some from the flower beds at my old home, I spent hours of my weekends digging and sweating in the Mississippi humidity in spite of the fact that I didn’t keep these plants. I just don’t have any more room at my current house […]
![](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/sassafras2-350x350.jpg)
The Native Sassafras Tree
I often see sassafras growing along the trails, in the forest breaks, and in old fields. However, it’s the mitten-shaped leaves that stand out to me. If you break off a twig of a sassafras tree and smell it, you get the distinct smell of root beer. My dad used to do this for us […]
![Balloon Flower in the Bud Stage](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/balloon-flower-702x526.jpg)
The Flower That Thinks It’s a Balloon
Right when the balloon flower, Platycodon grandiflorus, is about to bloom, it does its best impression of a balloon. It’s so good at it, I have to work really hard to keep myself from trying to squeeze it and make it pop! In addition to having a really fun bud stage, this is a hard-working […]
![Swamp mallow](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/swamp-mallow-flower5-702x526.jpg)
Swamp Mallow (Hibiscus coccineus): Hardy Native for Wet Soils
Have you got swampy soil? Then this is the perfect flowering plant solution for your garden. Native to the marshes and swamps of the southeastern states – from Louisiana to North Carolina –swamp mallows (Hibiscus coccineus) prefer wet soil and even standing water. Swamp Mallow is Perfect for Wet Soil I had one spot in […]
![Stokes aster](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/3-stokes-aster-702x526.jpg)
Stokes Aster – Native Plant With Beautiful Blue Flowers
A few years ago, I acquired a new plant that has quickly become one of my favorites – Stokes Aster (Stokesia laevis). These stunning purple-blue flowers simply captured my heart. I really like incorporating native plants and flowers into my garden. They are easy to grow and very hardy AND they attract butterflies and hummingbirds. […]
![Jewelweed (Impatiens capensis)](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/jewelweed-18-600x526.jpg)
Spotted Jewelweed: Touch-me-not plant
If you’ve got soil that stays wet most of the time, then spotted jewelweed is the plant for you. It’s native to most of the lower 48 states and prefers shade to part-shade – even better! In its native habitat, you’ll find it alongside roads in ditches that stay wet most of the time, alongside […]
![Southern magnolia](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/southern-magnolia-702x526.jpg)
Southern Magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora)
You’ll see beautiful, tall southern magnolias anywhere you go in my state. They are nearly ubiquitous in front of antebellum homes in the South, which is a testament to their popularity during that time in our history. I love the sweet, gentle lemon scent of the blooms and the large white petals. It’s a bonus […]
![Scentless mock orange flowers](https://www.gardenexperiments.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/shrub1-702x526.jpg)
Scentless Mock Orange – Native Shrub
In late spring and early summer, scentless mock orange (Philadelphus inodorus) is covered with bright white, 4-petaled flowers with a yellow center. These deciduous shrubs make a great privacy screen and are easy to grow. They can reach a height of 12 feet, so prune them back in summer, just after the flowers are over. […]