Culver’s Root: An Easy Native for the Summer Border

Culver’s Root (Veronicastrum) Erica on a misty morning

This hard-working, graceful perennial deserves to be better known. Ideal for native and rain gardens, Culver’s Root (Veronicastrum) also does well in average garden soil and full sun in most any setting. It lends a strong vertical accent, doesn’t spread or self-seed, has a long bloom period, and the bees adore it. Best of all it needs almost no care. Easy-peasy!

Starting in June, each 2-foot to 5-foot stem will develop racemes, bud up and begin opening from the bottom up. Fluffy arrow-like pink, white or lavender tufts will billow softly in the breeze atop attractive palmate foliage. This plant doesn’t need staking (when grown in full sun) and it stands up well to storms. Deer may sample it occasionally, but they leave it alone for the most part. Remarkably disease resistant, Culver’s root takes heat and humidity in stride.

Fleeting Visitors Up Close

An excellent time to observe the more elusive visitors to a garden is early morning. It’s mid-July, and I’m up well before 7:00 this morning. A humid 75-degree haze fogs the windows and runs in rivulets down the panes. Our street is quiet. Only the regular runners and the occasional commuter are out and about.

I drain the last of my coffee and fit the Nikon D-800 with a macro lens. Stepping outside, the clear notes of our resident song sparrow pierce the air. I step into the front garden populated with dwarf conifers, barberry, roses, and lush fountains of maiden grass dripping with dew. I don’t have long to wait for the action to begin.