native texas mix - Native American Seed
Transcription
native texas mix - Native American Seed
p.11 p.10 Lady Bird's Legacy p.46 Native Texas Mix Order over $89 for a chance to win free seed for a school or non-profit p.61 organization of your choice! Texas Bluebonnets . . . helpin g p e o p l e re s to re th e e a rth www.seedsource.com 'wildflower issue' fall/winter 2010 ...helping people restore the Earth Wildlife Habitat Lost “Green Energy” is needed. And somehow, Texas has come up with more wind turbines than anybody else. I reckon that is a good thing, especially on windy days. “Green Energy” needs to be done right. Building windmills over deserts and plains of West Texas is one thing… But a story of tragic proportion is unfolding called: The Transmission of “Green Energy”. Over the next year or so, a handful of Texas’ utility companies will permanently clear cut approximately 56,000 acres of rural landscapes bringing energy from west to east. For example, Lower Colorado River Authority, LCRA, is proposing to build 150 miles of industrial 18 story height transmission lines from San Angelo to San Antonio. A set of ‘double circuit 345kV lines’ will cut diagonally thru the state’s richest biological eco-region, the Texas Hill Country on Edwards Plateau. The fast tracked $5 billion dollar project impacts not only our Hill Country Llano River farm, but so many of our neighbors, communities and customers across the Rolling Plains, Cross Timbers, Blacklands, Coastal Prairies, and Chihuahuan Desert regions. These Hill Country lines are likely to ruin thousands of Live Oaks and spread Oak Wilt disease. Ecologically rich wildlife habitat will be lost and/or fragmented. LCRA is bent on using the 185’ tall, 4 legged monster lattice towers… which are just plain to say, “darn ugly”. But just like all tragedies, also come opportunities. to revegetate 56,000 acres As a people, we get once in a lifetime chances to make something of our responsibility to the future. 2300 miles of really big ugly, industrial transmission lines are the type of things that fit into the “forever” category. The placement of them absolutely does impact the world we will give to children whose voices have not yet been heard. The awesome responsibility lies in our hands at this very moment. In the end, the sight of our collective decision on this issue will be viewed from many, many miles away. In fact, many states across the country are closely watching for the outcome of this transmission battle in Texas. Heck, even China is watching in the hopes of selling more and cheaper wind turbines. "An estimated 80 percent of new outbreaks of oak wilt result from wounding during construction activity." - Iowa State Extension But we Texans can say with a measure of confidence that tomorrow, when the first wave of these lines are all built …56,000 acres less open space will be remaining. That’s about 90 square miles, and that’s forever. In a place that is 94% privately owned, and simultaneously losing open space faster than any other state in the nation… you would expect we’d think long and hard before implementing such an industrial scaled project. The people are mostly asking; if we must build this industrial monstrosity, then build it right. Build with modern monopoles instead of the 4-legged robot towers. Put it along existing compatible highway or transmission rights-of ways… instead of cutting up undeveloped Hill Country open-space. Unfortunately, landowners across the rusty barbed-wire fences of the western Hill Country region do not have much confidence in the current plan or its execution. This fast tracked train seems perty well designed to leave Texas’ ol’ time ranching people behind. Some of ‘em have been out there since the Alamo, the Civil War and the Indian Wars. And all of ‘em know why the Comanche fought so hard for this land. Perhaps someday we may learn that every farm or ranch is like a self-portrait of its owner. And if we ever see a beautiful region again such as the Texas Hill Country, that we may also recognize the hard fought daily battles of land stewardship. And someday we may respect those battles …and those land stewards whom have gone before us. 2 N ati v e A merica n S eed • 800 728 4043 N at i v e A m e ri ca n Bill Neiman - President, Clear View Alliance, Inc A Texas Non-profit Corporation info see www.ClearViewAlliance.org www.seedsource.com S e eFor d •more 3 ICAN NATI V R AME E SEED Mail Order Station: call ahead to schedule a seed order pick-up, farm tours only by special arrangement due to time and safety constraints. 3791 N US Hwy 377 Junction, TX 76849 Ph: 800-728-4043 Fax: 800-728-3943 © Native American Seed, 2010 all photos by Bill Neiman unless credited to others Sensible People, Your satisfaction is important to us! The Seeds we offer are native to the regions on centerfold map. Guarantee Diverse groups of businesses, government agencies, schools, nonprofit organizations, land managers and home owners are using these seeds to solve common landscape problems. What Problems The Waste The Benefits With simple truths, it's possible to make clear choices. Native seeds belong in your landscape. Native plants and grasses work for you! They require no extra watering once established. They are naturally disease and bug resistant. Fertilizing, not required. Grueling maintenance is unnecessary. We guarantee you will enjoy these benefits. As time has run out for many native habitats, consider leaving your land in better condition than you found it. Make informed choices about the future of the land, be responsible and plant native seeds. You have the power to make a difference! Become native to your place. Choose a path of stewardship and a lifetime of wonder and learning. Order before 11am, & we'll ship the same day Time to plant seeds for the future ...and in times like these, it can be hard to know what to do. As always, we are grateful to have the harmonious rhythms of nature to shape our days. Now is the time to plant many of the grasses and wildflowers that are part of the "rainforest" in our area of the planet - the plains and prairies. The time to reaffirm our faith that there will indeed be a future. A time to remind ourselves that each of us has the right and the responsibility to create little spots of health on an ailing planet. A time to do our part, in the hope that our children and our children's children might have a chance to experience the joys of watching the earth wake up from a long winter's rest to flower into a beautiful spring. order online www.seedsource.com Native Seed Mixes Wildlife . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Wildflowers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Regional . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Conservancy . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Site Specific . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Grasses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Gift Packets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Individual Native Species Conservancy . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Wildflower D-Paks . . . . . . . . 25 Wildflowers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Live Roots. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Grasses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Cover Crop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Equipment Seed Slingers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Erosion Control Blanket . . . . . 29 eq. Choices About the Future straightforward as it sounds — harvesting equipment is designed for agricultural crops, not for differing sizes and shapes of wildflower and grass seeds. We’ve spent years of tinkering and rigging and inventing and adjusting to make it all work. The story isn’t over when the harvest is in. After the harvest is dry, it is ready to be cleaned. It is sifted through a series of screens and blowers carefully calibrated to separate out the seeds we want from the hitchhikers we are definitely not interested in. Then we send it off for testing, to be sure that the seeds are healthy and will work for you. Through disappointments and frustrations of equipment and weather, there are more than enough rare and fine moments to compensate. We get the opportunity to do the work we love! And our greatest pleasures come in knowing these seeds find new homes where they can begin to re-establish their balance in nature. Individual Why not embrace what remains of our natural world? The open prairies and meadows, the deep woods. The wet marshes, creeks and rivers. The dry deserts and mountains. Value native vegetation as food and habitat for other living creatures around us. When the seed tells us it’s ready, we move in the equipment. Not as Sensible People . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Meet Our Employees . . . . . . . 6 Perennials & Annuals . . . . . . . 8 Conservancy Harvests . . . . . 16 Slope & Pond Restoration . . . . 26 Hydro-seeding Natives . . . . . . 28 Where Ecosystems Meet . . . . 32 What is a Native? . . . . . . . . . . 34 Reference Books . . . . . . . . . . 58 Order Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Cool River Cabin . . . . . . . . . 60 How to Grow Native Seeds . 62 Species The Value Components within our mixtures may vary slightly due to availability, especially in times of drought or flood. This work is more than difficult when considering the issues surrounding global climate change. We are thankful for your understanding. Information & Education Seed Mixes By planting exotics, your time, money and energy may be wasted. Activities such as replanting each year, spraying dangerous chemicals, working hours or days each week on boring maintenance or worse yet — continual watering may be required. All are unwise choices for our budgets, the quality of our water, and our land. If your order has been damaged in shipping, contact us within ten days of receipt. We want to correct any errors or claims quickly. Native American Seed strives to provide you seeds of the highest quality possible. Our seeds are tested by independent laboratories utilizing standards approved by the Association of Official Seed Analysts. We are committed to preventing the spread of invasive species and abide by state seed laws. With the variety and uncertainty of environmental conditions, we cannot guarantee the establishment of plants. Being our sole warranty we make no other, expressed or implied. Return within 10 days any unopened bags of seed not accepted under these terms. The purchase price of the seed is the limit of our liability. Prices and availability are subject to change. Awareness Here you find no promotion of ‘exotic’ plants that are from Morocco, Paraguay, Brazil or Europe. Know that bermudagrass and African daisy are from the other side of the planet. Crimson clover, baby’s breath, corn poppy and dame’s rocket are from Europe. Train your eye to recognize the exotics and their consequences. The use of exotics may require that you attempt to “control the elements.” Often these exotics go out of control and, lacking balance in their new environment, may take over large areas of land when planted here. We want you to be totally pleased with our efforts and our products. we are your native seedsource and more than ever special thanks to the at work for you 24/7 W ildlife Mixes More rewarding than any bird feeder! 22 years & counting 2010 Employee Team Hummers & Singers Butterfly Retreat Mix Mix ...helping people restore the earth ...helping people restore the Earth "Our hearts sing with deep appreciation for your interest in our work. you give us the hope and determination to carry into the future!" Sustainable Quail & Dove Mix 1 2 3 4 After over 20 years of gathering seeds and studying nature, we've found our winged friends appreciate the diversity in this mix. Songbirds and hummingbirds use these plants as a food source, nesting materials and cover. Select a sunny space. Open the window into the fascinating world of birds. 5 “Where Have All the Quail Gone?” A recent publication by The Texas Quail Conservation Initiative identified several reasons behind quail decline. The major one is habitat loss through land fragmentation. Quail prefer to travel through their range on the ground and not through the air. Quail use native bunch grasses for cover and nesting. Native wildflowers and grasses are drought tolerant, 6 7 8 beautiful and also supply Native Grasses: Little Bluestem, Indiangrass, Switchgrass (6), nutrients perfectly balanced Sideoats Grama (7), Big Bluestem, Texas Cupgrass (8) for wildlife. At Native American Seed, we have created a seed mix called Sustainable Quail & Dove Mix that includes the best of these native grasses & wildflowers. Issue your own invitation to our declining Quail population by planting sustainable native grasses & wildflowers. Good for Turkeys too. Wildlife biologists recommend this mix! 6 Native Forbs: Wooly Croton, Illinois Bundleflower, Partridge Pea, American Basketflower (1), Common Sunflower, Texas Yellow Star (5), Golden Dalea, Texas Bluebonnets (4), Maximilian Sunflower (3), Purple Prairie Clover, White Prickly Poppy (2) Sustainable Quail & Dove Item #1813 Seeding rate 8 lbs / acre 1 pkt $5 20 sq ft 1/4 lb $8 1350 sq ft photo by Steve Schaeffer Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 $22 / lb 5400 sq ft Greenthread, Bush Sunflower, Partridge Pea, Purple Coneflower, Cutleaf Daisy, Lemon Mint, Illinois Bundleflower, Drummond Phlox, Purple Prairie Clover, White Gaura, Winecup Pink Evening Primrose, American Basketflower, Standing Cypress (pictured), Gayfeather, Scarlet Sage, Black-Eyed Susan, Butterfly Weed, Maximilian Sunflower, Mealy Blue Sage Item #4503 Hummers & Singers Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre 1 pkt $5 20 sq ft 1 Texas Bluebonnet, Indian Blanket, Huisache Daisy, Lanceleaf Coreopsis, American Basketflower, Purple Coneflower, Greenthread, Lemon Mint, Purple Prairie Clover, Cutleaf Daisy, Partridge Pea, Illinois Bundleflower, Drummond Phlox, Winecup,Tahoka Daisy, Standing Cypress, Foxglove, Golden-Wave, Maximilian Sunflower, Prairie Verbena, Gayfeather, Black-Eyed Susan, Scarlet Sage, Mealy Blue Sage, Butterfly Weed Butterfly Retreat Blooms Most of Year! Item #4501 Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre 1/4 lb $17 500 sq ft $44 / lb 2000 sq ft 3 2 Host a party for butterflies at your place! Select a sunny area. These native annuals and perennials will do the rest. Next spring your Butterfly Retreat will invite your guests to feast on nectar and color throughout the season. Contains a beautiful mix of species that will host butterflies in each phase of their life cycle. Pollinators favorite/continuous bloom 1 pkt $5 20 sq ft Texas Bluebonnet (1), Black-Eyed Susan, Indian Blanket (2), Scrambled Eggs, White Gaura, Greenthread, Lemon Mint, Purple Coneflower, Mealy Blue Sage, Tahoka Daisy, Pitcher Sage, Prairie Verbena, Mexican Hat, Pink Evening Primrose, Gayfeather, Scarlet Sage, Butterfly Weed, Frostweed (3), Maximilian Sunflower Item #1812 Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre 1 pkt $5 20 sq ft 1/4 lb $17 500 sq ft $44 / lb 2000 sq ft $44 / lb 2000 sq ft Deer Resistant Mix These wildflowers are unpalatable and rarely eaten by deer, grow back rapidly when nipped, and are aromatic to confuse their senses. Deer Resistant 1/4 lb $17 500 sq ft Photo by John H. Gleinser Quail & Dove, Deer Resistant, Hummers & Singers, Butterfly Retreat Back: Johnnie, Emily, Beto, Tootsie, Jenn, Melinda, Carolyn, Zee, Ponce, Carlos, George, Tony. Front: Patsy, Casey, Robert, Jan, Bill, Westy. 7 Eastern Gamagrass Perennial plants are notably tolerant of wildfire and are commonly found on prairies. Flowering over many seasons in their lifetime, perennials are usually better competitors than annual plants, especially under stable, resourcepoor conditions. This is due to the development of larger root systems which can access water and soil nutrients deeper in the soil. These plants tend to invest a lot of resource into their adaptations and often do not flower and set seed until after a few years of growth. Many perennials produce relatively large seeds, which can have an advantage, with larger seedlings produced after germination that can better compete with other plants or more quickly develop leaves for photosynthesis. They can produce seeds for many years. Live Roots Sale! Most productive, nutritious forage grass on the planet! Ancestor of corn. Intriguing pollination & seed-bearing parts. Good larval food source for butterflies. Turkey & Quail love it! (see p. 49) $19 / bundle Plant in Create a Pocket Prairie The life cycle for an annual occurs in a year or season (germinates, flowers, makes seed and dies). Annuals tend to produce many more seeds per plant since they will die after flowering and setting seed. The seeds wait to germinate again next season or after a significant soil disturbance. Winter annuals are important ecologically. They provide vegetative cover that prevent soil erosion during winter and early spring when other plants are dormant. During this time, annuals also provide fresh vegetation for animals and birds that feed on them. S tewardship Native Trail Mix O Homeowners and gardeners can reverse the dramatic plunge in biodiversity by simply creating a prairie ecosystem to fit in a small area. The addition of pocket prairies to urban landscapes increases the diversity of birds, butterflies, and many other living things in areas where native habitat is limited. Even though pocket prairies are small, they serve as wildlife refuges and seed banks for future restoration projects. This is a great mix for beekeepers! Look around you. Is your wildlife desperate for native vegetation? Bees trying to pollinate trashcans, birds scavenging for french fries in the concrete deserts, butterflies aimlessly fluttering with nowhere to rest, feed, or lay their eggs. Observe what natives grow in your area. Establish your own pocket prairie. We are here to help. Spring-or-Fall Mix of ver camp X ri ur most nutritious blend of natives. It provides habitat, nectar and food for many creatures of the wild such as songbirds and butterflies. The people before us were a walking people. Many of our present day ative rail ix roads originated from footpaths. It may be as Native Grasses Buffalograss, Blue Grama, Prairie Wildrye, Little Bluestem, Sideoats Grama, it once was, that we Green Sprangletop, Sand Lovegrass, White Tridens become a walking Texas Cupgrass, Cane Bluestem, Virginia Wildrye people again. Native Wildflowers Texas Bluebonnet, Drummond Phlox, Gayfeather, Indian Blanket, Have no trails? Lanceleaf Coreopsis, Greenthread, Purple Coneflower, Any parcel of land Cutleaf Daisy, Huisache Daisy, Purple Prairie Clover, looking to become a Standing Cypress, Bush Sunflower, Golden-Wave, wildflower meadow Clasping Coneflower, Lemon Mint, Missouri Primrose, will qualify. American Basketflower, Black-Eyed Susan, This offering comes Mexican Hat, Plains Coreopsis, Prairie Coneflower, complete with a Maximilian Sunflower, Lazy Daisy sprinkling of native prairie grasses. Native Trail Mix Item #1811 N T M Seeding rate 10 lbs / acre 1 lb $44 All Perennial Wildflowers 4300 sq ft 1/4 lb $17 1000 sq ft Most popular perennial mix of colors that can thrive in wide range of environments. Plant in spring or fall and roots will develop over a year with blooms the next. Wildflowers live and bloom year after year! Standing Cypress Greenthread, Foxglove, Lanceleaf Coreopsis, White Gaura, Gayfeather, Butterfly Weed, Winecup, Purple Prairie Clover, Mealy Blue Sage, Pink Evening Primrose, White Prairie Clover, Standing Cypress, Cutleaf Daisy, Scarlet Sage, Missouri Primrose Plant-in-Spring or Fall Mix Foxglove Item #1808 Seeding rate 15 lbs / acre 1 lb $49 2800 sq ft 88 Cutleaf Daisy 1/4 lb $19 700 sq ft 1 pkt $5 20 sq ft N atiA ve A merica n S eed 4043 • 800 Native merican Seed • 800 728728 4043 Mealy Blue Sage N at i v e AOrder m e ri ca n S e e•dwww.seedsource.com • www.seedsource.com Online 1 pkt $5 20 sq ft Native Trail Mix - Plant in Spring-or-Fall Mix 5-15 live plants per bundle. buy 1, get 1 free! Annual P ath Wildflower Mixes Perennial a C hoose Understanding Plant Life Cycles 99 TX-OK Native Roadside Mix Item #1810 Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre 1 lb $39 2000 sq ft 10 10 Photo by Mike Boroff, Austin American Statesman Texas Bluebonnet, Indian Blanket, Black-Eyed Susan, Winecup, Purple Coneflower, Lemon Mint, Prairie Verbena, Indian Paintbrush, Drummond Phlox, Texas Bluebells, Pink Evening Primrose, and Plains Coreopsis Texas Bluebonnet , Indian Blanket, Black-Eyed Susan, Prairie Coneflower, Clasping Coneflower, Lemon Mint, Mexican Hat, Plains Coreopsis Native Texas Mix Lady Bird's Legacy Item #1001 500 sq ft 1 pkt $5 20 sq ft 1 lb $29 2000 sq ft Native • 800 728728 4043 N ati vAemerican A mericaSneed S eed 4043 • 800 1/4 lb $9 500 sq ft Seed Grants to Texas Schools Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre 1/4 lb $15 Item #1814 1 lb / 2000 sq ft — $44 1/4 lb / 500 sq ft — $17 1 pkt / 20 sq ft— $5 1 pkt $5 20 sq ft With his wife, Lady Bird, at his side, the two worked tirelessly to clean up America's highways, promote conservation and preserve the country's natural landscapes. We, at Native American Seed, are deeply honored to do our part to sustain this national land stewardship legacy. A percentage of sales of this mix will be donated to the Wildflower Center Seed Grant program to buy seeds for Texas schools. Fulton Learning Center Huisache Daisy 4.00% Drummond Phlox 3.70% Black-eyed Susan 2.65% Texas Yellow Star 2.00% Lanceleaf Coreopsis 1.80% Pink Evening Primrose 1.15% Mexican Hat 1.05% Bush Sunflower 0.93% Prairie Coneflower 0.70% Winecup 0.05% Total 100.00% Native American Seed has partnered with the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center and the Austin American-Statesman to offer you this premium seed mix. Components of the mix are among Lady Bird’s favorites, and are well-suited to Central Texas. Comprised of annuals and perennials, you will see blooms from spring – early summer. Lyndon Baines Johnson championed scores of environmental bills during his presidency of the United States. Lemon Mint % by weight Texas Bluebonnet 18.74% Indian Blanket 10.94% Greenthread 7.35% Plains Coreopsis 7.32% Clasping Coneflower 6.15% Golden-Wave 5.65% Purple Coneflower 5.62% Scarlet Sage 5.35% Lemon Mint 5.05% Purple Prairie Clover 5.00% Cutleaf Daisy 4.80% Plains Coreopsis the last open spaces that we have. We view our world now through the windshield. The roadside is a reflection of who we are.” Why not keep these threads of beauty as they once were? No need to trash them with exotic plants from Europe, South America or Africa. Offered for everyone who would like to keep the land responsibly beautiful. The Texas-Oklahoma Native Roadside Mix consists of 100% native wildflowers. Just the right mixture of annuals and perennials for quick establishment and sustainable plantings. Low to medium heights at maturity allow good visibility over the top of the plants. Always let plants reseed before mowing for year-after-year native blooms. Lady Bird's Legacy Wildflower Mix ... all ideally suited to thrive in the changeable climate of the south central Great Plains. Unlike many of the other so-called native wildflower mixes, ours contain no “extras” of seeds from California, Africa or Europe. Nor do they come packed with any rice husks or other inert matter to pad out the package and make it look like you’re getting more than you really are. Grows to about knee-high. Our 1st mix designed in 1988. Texas Bluebonnet It has been said, “The roadsides may become Native Texas Mix N at i v e Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center with Native American Seed awards grants of seed to Texas schools (K-12). The Wildflower Center’s mission is to increase the sustainable use and conservation of native wildflowers, plants and landscapes. www.seedsource.com A m e ri ca nFor S emore e d •info or to apply, visit: www.wildflower.org/wildflowers Tx-Ok Roadside Mix - Lady Bird's Legacy Wildflower Mix Texas-Oklahoma Native Roadside Mix Wildflower Mixes If you are a land planner or in a public service agency, we have included the percentage by weight chart for bid documents. 11 The boundaries then were ecological, soft, flowing, giving and taking with respect. You can help them flourish again. May you become the native. named to honor the people who fought so hard for this lands d Item #1800 1/4 lb $11 2000 sq ft 500 sq ft N ati vAemerican A mericaSneed S eed 4043 • 800 Native • 800 728728 4043 1 pkt $5 20 sq ft Illinois Bundleflower Black-Eyed Susan Great collection of hardy natives known to thrive along the piney woods and savannas, from east Texas to Atlantic coast. Good companion to Eastern Savannah Mix, see page 15. Texas Bluebonnet, Greenthread, Indian Blanket, Standing Cypress, Purple Prairie Clover, Mealy Blue Sage, Gayfeather, Bush Sunflower, Cutleaf Daisy, Foxglove, Golden-Wave, Missouri Primrose Clasping Coneflower, Lemon Mint, Indian Blanket, Partridge Pea, Plains Coreopsis, Black-Eyed Susan, Drummond Phlox, Illinois Bundleflower, Pink Evening Primrose, Lazy Daisy Apache Plateau Mix Caddo Mix Item #1805 Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre 1 lb $34 Pink Evening Primrose Standing Cypress Gayfeather Golden-Wave Lemon Mint Long blooming season, color starts in spring goes through summer and continues into the fall. Texas Bluebonnet, Huisache Daisy, Lemon Mint, Indian Blanket, Greenthread, Lazy Daisy, Prairie Verbena Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre Caddo Mix Blooms spring, summer and fall... Sow in a sunny location in early fall. This Hill Country blend contains annuals and perennials for spring and summer blooms. After bloomtime, allow seeds to ripen before mowing. This assures you an even denser stand next year. Bring back a piece of history to your own land! Comanche Mix 12 12 do an m Indian Blanket You may see that the people before us identified themselves with the land and were native to it. che teau Pla he ac The offerings are named according to the region’s numerous tribal people who once flourished. Apache Plateau Mix Comanche Mix T ribal N ames ? Texas Bluebonnet the Ca Item #1806 Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre 1 lb $44 1/4 lb $17 2000 sq ft 500 sq ft 1 pkt $5 1 lb $41 1/4 lb $16 20 sq ft 2000 sq ft 500 sq ft N at i v e AOrder m e ri ca n S e e•d www.seedsource.com • www.seedsource.com Online 1 pkt $5 20 sq ft Comanche Mix - Apache Plateau Mix - Caddo Mix W hy Regional Mixes p A o C 13 13 R egional Mixes "for miles the prairie gently sloped, hardly presenting a bush to relieve the eye. In the distance, the green skirting of woods, which fringed either border of a large stream, softened down the view. Occasionally a deer would jump suddenly from his noonday rest, and scamper off..." early pioneer, 1841 Big Bluestem Texas Cupgrass Pitcher Sage 14 Item #2800 Seeding rate 8 lbs / acre Height 1-5 feet Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 D-Pak $9 200 sq ft Big Bluestem Bushy Bluestem Indiangrass Eastern Gamagrass Little Bluestem Prairie Wildrye Virginia Wildrye $29 / lb Eastern Gamagrass Indiangrass Buffalograss Cane Bluestem Eastern Savannah Grass Mix Seeding rate 7 lbs / acre Seeding rate 6 lbs / acre Height 1-3 feet 200 sq ft For more diversity, add Caddo Mix (page 13) in the fall after the grasses get a hold. Wildflowers will bloom the next spring. Western Rangeland Grass Mix Item #2806 D-Pak $9 5400 sq ft Sideoats Grama Switchgrass Purpletop Sand Dropseed Sand Lovegrass Broomsedge Bluestem Though it is true... much can be said to have been lost... we can rebuild healthy grasslands by starting right here. The melding of meadows and prairies amongst the wooded areas is known as a savannah. The grasses can return us to sustainability...by offering their strongest traits of being the survivors during times of drought. Thrives east of I-35 to the Atlantic Ocean. Finally a diverse, native and exceptionally drought tolerant blend of the toughest grasses. Perfectly suited for the harsh conditions that can prevail from “God’s country” ... TransPecos /Chihuahuan Desert... on westward to the Cochise and Sonoran Desert eco-regions. Each of us is obliged to do what we can to conserve and create water and wildlife habitat. Putting grass, the earth’s living skin, back where it belongs will accomplish these important tasks for the future. Prairie birds such as quail and many small mammals rely on this structural type of prairie habitat for their basic patterns of reproduction and mobility. The over-story grass canopy provides protection from soaring hawks and other predators by keeping big portions of the micro-trails out of view. Nesting also occurs under this canopy or directly in the clumped bunchgrasses. Blackland Prairie Mix Purple Three Awn Sand Dropseed Green Sprangletop Cane Bluestem Sonora Sideoats Grama Plains Bristlegrass Western Wheatgrass Bushy Bluestem Native prairie grasses are structurally quite different than exotic pasture grasses. For example, Texas' pasturelands are primarily planted to bermudagrass introduced from Africa. This exotic pasture grass creates a dense, tangled, matted turf. Native prairie grasses, by contrast, are typically bunch forming. This characteristic allows for systems of wildlife micro-trails to occur under the grass canopy by traveling around the clumps of the root bases. Blue Grama Eastern Gamagrass Cutleaf Daisy Foxglove Gayfeather Lemon Mint Buffalograss Prairie Wildrye Purpletop American Basketflower Butterflyweed Clasping Coneflower Pink Evening Primrose Spiderwort Texas Yellow Star Winecup Blue Grama Buffalograss Black Grama Galleta Curly Mesquite Little Bluestem Prairie Wildrye $24 / lb 6200 sq ft Order Online • www.seedsource.com Item #2805 Height 3-5 feet D-Pak $9 200 sq ft $28 / lb Blackland Prairie - Western Rangeland - Eastern Savannah By 1900, the Blackland Prairie was mostly under cultivation, being recognized as one of the foremost cotton producing regions of the world. Many grand old Victorian homes in the cities and towns still exist as reminders of the fortunes made in those times. Cultivation was a catastrophic disruption of the prairie ecosystem. It was a common farmers’ joke to tell the story of an old Indian who, having seen a plowed field for the first time, said to the farmer, “Wrong side up.” The story was taken to be an illustration of the Indian’s ignorance, but in fact when the native grasses are turned under and the soil aerated, the organic matter decomposes faster. This creates a flush of nutrients available to cultivated crops, but when the crops are harvested, the nutrients are removed with the harvest, and the soil continues to be depleted year after year. Today’s dependence on chemical fertilizers is evidence that perhaps there was more wisdom in that old Indian’s statement than was recognized at the time. Little Bluestem Indiangrass Partridge Pea Purple Prairie Clover Indian Blanket Upland Switchgrass Sideoats Grama Cane Bluestem Maximilian Sunflower Big Bluestem Illinois Bundleflower Black-Eyed Susan Texas Cupgrass Pitcher Sage Plains Coreopsis Eastern Savannah Mix Western Rangeland Mix Blackland Prairie Mix 7200 sq ft 15 Conservancy HARVESTS beyond the prairie, I would give a special place for you now and for your children's children into the future I know of no other gift more worthy to give. Native American Seed conducts conservancy harvests on some of our last great prairie remnants. These harvests play a valuable role in preserving the genetic richness and diversity. This is of special interest to those involved in land and wildlife habitat restoration, sustainable grazing or prairie conservation. 16 Diverse genetics We are grateful to the few hard-scrabble generations of ranch stewards who have been able to protect their grassland resources. Much has been lost to a century of policies that favor global trading over the careful land management and animal husbandry required to produce healthy, grassland resources. Ranchers who have been able to Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 Cleaning plant Highest quality hold on are finally beginning to reap the benefits of their dedication to land stewardship, as more and more people are committing themselves to a cleaner and greener life. Many of our seed mixtures also contain firstrung species on the early successional ladder, essential to rebuilding native grasslands on demineralized, mined-out soils. These conservancy harvests are hardy, droughtWhere ever you plant these seeds - know that we tolerant species that will be able to survive the are thankful for your interest in our work. warmer and drier future climates. Order Online • www.seedsource.com native prairie remnants Prairie remnant harvest 17 Add more Blue Curls life 3051 3068 3155 3111 3162 Habit Blm Height Bloom Clr Time American Beautyberry P Pp Callicarpa americana Antelope Horns P Gr Asclepias asperula Beardtongue P Pk Penstemon laxiflorus Bergamo t P Pp Monarda fistulosa Big Red Sage Rd Salvia penstemonoides P 3 - 4' May-Jul 8 - 24" Mar-May 1 - 2' Mar-Jun 1 - 3' May-Jul 1 - 3' Jun-Oct Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > > ◗ ❂● > > > > > > > > > > > > ✸ ◗❂ ✸◗❂ ✸ ◗ ❂● ✸ ◗❂ ✸ ◗ ❂● ✸◗ ✸◗ ✸◗❂ ✸ ✸ ✸ ✸◗ Item # Common Name Botanical Name Habit Blm Height Clr Bloom Time Devil’s Claw 3145 Pp 1 - 2' Jun-Sep Proboscidea louisianica A 1012 Diamond Petal Primrose A Yw 1 - 3' May-Jun Oenothera rhombipetala 1017 Eryngo Eryngium leavenworthii A Frostweed NEW! 3062 P Verbesina virginica 3144 Giant Coneflower P Rudbeckia maxima G iant G oldenrod 3165 P Solidago gigantea G olden D alea 3057 P Dalea aurea G reen L ily 3154 Schoenocaulon texanum P Green Milkweed 3101 P Asclepias viridis Gulf Coast Penstemon 3114 P Penstemon tenuis 3063 Jimson Weed P Datura inoxia Lantana 3083 Shrub Lantana horrida Limestone Gaura 3096 P Gaura calcicola 3112 Missouri Primrose Oenothera missouriensis P Mormon Tea 3153 Ephedra antisyphylitica Shrub Yellow Prairie Flax Windflower Missouri Primrose Skeleton Plant Red Columbine Frostweed Prairie Larkspur Pp Wt 2- 3' Aug-Nov 3 - 6' Aug-Nov Yw 3 - 6' May-Jun Yw 3 - 5' Jul-Nov Yw 1 - 2' Jun-Jul Gr 1 - 2' Apr-May Gr 1 - 2' Apr-Sep P 18" Mar-May Wt 2 - 3' Apr-Oct Rd 2 - 3' Sprg-Fall Rd 1 - 2' May-Jun Yw 1 - 2' Apr-Jun G to 3' Mar-May Item # Common Name Botanical Name Passionflower 3087 P Passiflora incarnata 3079 Pincushion Daisy P Gaillardia suavis 3134 Plateau Agalinis Agalinis edwardsiana A P rairie Agalinis 1008 A Agalinis heterophyla P rairie G oldenrod 3160 P Solidago nemoralis 3058 Prairie Larkspur Delphinium virescens P 3104 Prairie Paintbrush P Castilleja purpurea Prairie Parsley 3156 B Polytaenia nuttalli ! Priaire Nymph NEW 3176 P Herbertia lahue Purple Nightshade 3140 Solanum elaeagnifolium P Rattlesnake Master 3149 Eryngium yuccifolium P R ain Lily 3094 Cooperia pedunculata P Red Columbine 3098 Aquilegia canadensis P Red Dome Blanketflower 3169 P Gaillardia pinnatifida Round-Headed Clover 3116 P Dalea multiflora Skeleton Plant NEW! 3085 P Lygodesmia texana Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > > Sunlight ✸ > > ✸◗ > > > ✸◗ > > > ◗ ❂ ● > > > ✸◗ > > ✸◗❂ > > ✸ > > > > ✸◗ > > > > ✸ > > > ✸ > > > > ✸ > > > ✸ ◗ ❂ > > > > ✸◗ > > > > > > Habit ✸ Blm Clr Height Bloom Time Lav Vine Rd 1 - 2' Mar-May Pk 1 - 3' Aug-Oct Pk 18" > > > > > > > > > > > Aug-Nov 8 - 24" Sep-Oct Bl 1 - 3' Apr-Jun 6-12" Mar-May Ppl 1 - 2' Apr-Sep Red 1 - 2' Mar-May Yw 1 - 3' Apr-June Wt 1 - 3' Jun-Jul Pp 1 - 2' Jul-Aug 9100 > ◗ 3136 ✸◗ > > > Pp Wt 6 - 12"Apr-May ✸ > > > 2 - 3' Apr-June 8 - 20" Apr-Jul 3129 > > > 6 - 18" Mar-May > > > > > > > ✸◗ ✸ 3175 ◗ ❂ ● 9101 ✸ 3086 ✸◗ 3125 ✸◗ 3072 ◗ ❂● > ✸ > > ✸ ✸ More photos & info on our website ✸◗ American Beautyberry 3135 9600 > > > > > 3172 > > > > 3163 ✸◗ > > > > > Scarlet Muskflower All quantities limited Item # Common Name Botanical Name ✸◗❂ > > > > ✸ Yw Wh Sunlight Sand Loam Clay Caliche May-Aug Yw Pp Soil Type 3050 3099 3084 3171 3124 Habit Blm Height Clr Bloom Time Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche Snailseed P Rd Ber Vine Jul-Aug Cocculus carolinus Snapdragon Vine Maurandya antirrhinifloraP Pp Vine Mar-Sep Spotted Beebalm P Yw 1 - 3' May-Aug Monarda punctata Standing Cypress P Yw&Red 2 - 5'May-Jun Ipomopsis rubra Standing Winecup P Pp 1 - 4' Mar-May Callirhoe digitata Star Milkweed P Wt Vine Apr-June Matelea biflora Texas Redbud Cercis canadensis v. texensis Pk Sm.Tree Mar-Apr > > > > > > Sunlight ◗ ❂● > ✸◗ ❂ ✸◗ > > > > ✸◗❂ > > > > ✸◗ ❂ > > > > ◗ ❂● > > > ✸◗ Texas Thistle NEW! P Pp 2 - 5' May-Jul > > > ✸◗ Cirsium texanum Trumpet Vine P Org Vine Jun-Sep > > > > ✸ ◗ ❂ Campsis radicans Turk's Cap Malvaviscus drummondii Srb Red 2 - 3' May-Nov > > > > ✸ ◗ ❂ ● Two-Leaved Senna P Yw 1 - 2' Apr-Oct > > > > ✸ ◗ Cassia roemeriana Wild Hyacinth ✸◗❂ P Bl 1 - 2' Mar-May > > > Camassia scilloides Windflower NEW! 4 - 16" Feb-Apr ✸ > > Anemone heterophylla P Bl Yellow Columbine ❂● > > Aquilegia chrysanthum P Yw 1 - 3' May Yellow Prairie Flax A Yw 6 - 18"Mar-Oct > > > > ✸ ◗ Linum rigidum Yellow Wild Indigo ✸ > > Baptisia sphaerocarpa P Yw 1 - 3' Apr-Jun Zexmenia P Yw 1 - 3' May-Sep > > > > ✸ ◗ Zexmenia hispida Snapdragon Vine Jimson Weed Lantana Limestone Gaura Pincushion Daisy Purple Nightshade Mormon Tea Passionflower Snailseed (vine) Zexmenia Lee Marlowe Eryngo ✸ > > > > ✸ ◗ Curls 3133 Blue A Bl 1 - 3' Mar-May > > > Phacelia congesta ! W E 3093 Blue-eyed Grass N 6-18" Mar-Apr > > > > Sisyrinchium ensigerum P Bl B lue M istflower 3173 1 - 3' Jul-Nov > > > > Conoclinium coelestinum P Bl B uffalo G ourd 3161 Yw vine May-Sep > > > > Cucurbita foetidissima P B utton B ush 3164 Cephalanthus occidentalis Shrub Wt 5 - 10' Jun-Sep > > > Cardinal Flower 3095 P Rd 1 - 4' Jul-Oct > > > Lobelia cardinalis 3088 Clammyweed Wt 1 - 3' May-Jul > Polanisia dodecandra A Cowpen Daisy 3054 Yw 1 - 4' Apr-Oct > Verbesina encelioides A Crow Poison 3150 Wt 4 - 12" Sprg,Fall > > > > Nothoscordum bivalve P Cutleaf Evng Primrose 3137 A Yw 2 - 10" Mar-Oct > Oenothera laciniata Blue Mistflower Sunlight Texas Redbud Tree $6 each & color to the world San Antonio River Authority Item # Common Name Botanical Name Connie Merrill LBJ Wildflower Center Sally & Andy Wasowski packet covers 20 sq ft Conservancy Seed Conservancy Seed Packets Star Milkweed 18 18 Crow Poison Buttonbush Turk's Cap Native • 800 728728 4043 N ati vA e merican A mericaSneed S eed 4043 • 800 Green Milkweed N at i v e AOrder m e ri ca n S e e•d www.seedsource.com • www.seedsource.com Online 19 19 Conservancy Mixes beautiful seasonal color changes fall/winter spring/summer Coastal Prairie Mix Midway Mix Midway between the Edwards Plateau and the Trans Pecos. Midway between the tallgrass prairie and the Chihuahuan desert. There lies an oak savana in transition. NAS finds these remnants and harvests the seeds. Rarely is the harvest exactly the same year to year. It all depends on the weather. Those of you who have spent any length of time in these regions can attest, you can count on one thing when it comes to the weather … it is truly unpredictable. We do our best to offer a predictable mixture. Midway Mix contains species well adapted to the Chihuahuan desert climates. These hardy drought tolerant species are survivors for the warmer and drier future climates. The Midway Mix also contains first-rung species on the early-successional ladder that are useful in rebuilding the Edwards Plateau and the Rolling Plains. Short grasses make smooth transitions back to productive tall grasses with adequate rainfall, while keeping the ground covered, important to those concerned with the spread of invasive species. These short grasses also have deep roots, important to those concerned with water quality and ground water issues. Our work closely aligns with a mission to conserve and restore coastal prairie habitat for the critically endangered Attwater Prairie Chicken. Every portion of the coastal prairie seed harvested each year carries the potential for use in native habitat expansion. For example, transitioning rice fields that are beyond their productive life have been restored to a natural condition with these seeds. Coastal prairie habitat uniquely meets the needs of ground nesting prairie chickens and many other species of birds including quail. Texas’ largest remaining coastal prairie remnant, in federally protected status, is located within the Attwater Prairie Chicken National Wildlife Refuge near Eagle Lake. This refuge contains approximately 10,500 acres, half of which have never been plowed. Three grandmas ago, a million prairie chickens roamed the Louisiana/Texas coastal prairies. Today, only 52 remain in a 2 county area of southeast Texas. Many private and public landowners are using these rare seeds to build wildlife corridors leading to and from the refuge. The unique genetic strain of coastal bluestem found in this region is well adapted to warmer and wetter climates along the Gulf Coast states, stretching east to Florida. "The ideal, sustainable, healthy habitat in the Hill Country is a mixture of trees, forbs, and grasses." - Jim Stanley, Hill Country Landowner's Guide American Aloe Asclepias Aster Big Bluestem Boneset Broomsedge Bluestem Brownseed Paspalum Bushy Bluestem Butterfly Pea Croton Cupgrass Deer Tongue Eriogonum Florida Paspalum Gayfeather Giant Coneflower Gulf Coast Muhly Helianathus Indiangrass Little Bluestem Longspike Tridens Lupine Maximilian Sunflower Mexican Clover Native Sedge spp. Paspalum Prairie Agalinis Coastal Prairie Mix Seeding rate 8 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 5400 sq ft D-Pak $9 1-9 lbs $39 / lb 10-49 lbs $38 / lb Generations of humans, cows, goats, or other livestock has taken its toll on the land. In this book, Jim explains why and how to encourage the growth of native grasses and woody plants, the presence of songbirds and other native wildlife, and the health of trees and conservation of water. Both new and established landowners will want to add this book to their libraries of nature-related and land management references. see books p. 58 Texas Grama Hall’s Panicum Curly Mesquite Cane Bluestem Scarlet Muskflower Prairie Verbena Sonora Sideoats Grama Purple Threeawn Greenthread Purpletop Ragweed Rattlesnake Master Splitbeard Bluestem Sugarcane Plumegrass Switchgrass Tall Goldenrod Tall Dropseed Item # 2801 Red Seed Plantain Vine Mesquite Green Sprangletop Fall Witchgrass Bladder Pod Blue Grama Buffalograss Texas Cupgrass Midway Mix Seeding rate 10 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 4400 sq ft Height 1-5 feet 50+ lbs $37 lb 200 sq ft Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 Item # 2804 Height 6-18 inches $39 / lb D-Pak $9 200 sq ft 20 Skeleton Plant Hooded Windmill Grass Texas Panicum Red Grama Hairy Grama Yellow Fleabane Texas Tridens Six Weeks Grama Plains Lovegrass Order Online • www.seedsource.com Coastal Prairie Mix - Midway Mix Ultimately, survival of the Attwater Prairie Chicken and other native wildlife species will depend on people like you to re-create and protect healthy, diverse habitat. With Texas and many eastern states consisting of up to 98% private lands, it becomes a matter for each individual steward to do her/his part. Restoring prairie takes years, but dedicated efforts can pay off. Mindful awareness is required to fulfill obligations to ourselves, our families, nations, the natural world and to the creator. We are continuing to identify prairie remnants that will increase available genetic diversity. If you know of native remnants suitable for large-scale harvest, please advise. We appreciate your interest in our work. 21 S ite Specific Mixes Actual photo looking down the fence lines of land stewardship Erosion Control Blanket 4ft x 135 ft 22 Roll $39 wt 50 lbs Item #7056 Approximately $20 S/H other sizes available upon request Shade-Friendly Grass Mix Seeding rate 10 lbs / acre D-Pak $9 10-49 lbs $18.95 / lb Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 1 - 9 lbs $19.95 / lb 50+ lbs D-Pak $9 $18.25 / lb 200 sq ft Wildflowers in this mix make effective use of dappled sunlight in and around woods and other areas of shade. Mixture of annuals and perennials provide cover year round. These shade mixes will also grow in sunny areas & do very well mixed together! Item #2862 Height 1-2 feet $39 / lb 4300 sq ft Scarlet Sage Pigeonberry Height 3-4 feet Texas Wintergrass Item #2860 Seeding rate 10 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 4300 sq ft Sideoats Grama Finally... a mixture of native grasses for the shade! These grasses thrive under dappled sunlight in and around woods and other areas of shade. Mixture of cool and warm season species provides year round cover. See our Shade Friendly Wildflower Mix (right). Scarlet Sage Winecup Pigeonberry Clasping Coneflower Butterfly Weed Winecup Buffalograss Caliche Mix Purple Coneflower Lanceleaf Coreopsis Golden-Wave Cutleaf Daisy Drummond Phlox Black-Eyed Susan Inland Sea Oats Prairie Wildrye Sideoats Grama Plains Bristlegrass Viginia Wildrye Texas Wintergrass Purpletop Inland Sea Oats Indiangrass Texas Cupgrass This photodegradable straw-fiber blanket is perfect for holding native seed and moisture on erodible slopes and channels. The single-net construction is designed to provide erosion control and mulching on moderate slopes for up to 12 months. Excellent for promoting seed germination on sloped or flat infertile soils such as caliche. Prairie Wildrye Texas Cupgrass Sand Dropseed Sand Lovegrass Cane Bluestem Sideoats Grama Shade-Friendly Wildflower Mix Shade-Friendly Grass Mix Shade Friendly Wildflowers Item #4504 Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre 1 lb $49 1/4 lb $19 1 pkt $5 2000 sq ft 500 sq ft 20 sq ft Order Online • www.seedsource.com Caliche Mix - Shade-Friendly Mixes Blue Grama Buffalograss Green Sprangletop Curly Mesquite Indiangrass Little Bluestem Little Bluestem Sand Dropseed Meet the harsh challenges of dry, thin caliche soils. Native perennial grasses will slowly stabilize vegetative cover. Before planting, please give special consideration to erosion control, soil organic matter, and seed-to-soil contact. Prairie Wildrye Erosion Control Blanket Caliche Mix 23 Antelope Horn Wetland Fringe Mix Drainfield Mix Seeding rate 30 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 1300 sq ft Big Red Sage #3162 Height 5-6 feet Cowpen Daisy #3054 Giant Coneflower #3144 Golden Dalea #3057 A perfect collection of colorful, healing diversity for damaged and disturbed wetland fringe areas. Consider planting together with taller, moisture-loving grasses for erosion control and habitat improvement along water edges. Illinois Bundleflower Maximilian Sunflower American Basketflower Item #2861 These conservancy species offered in greater weights at reduced prices - we call them “D-Paks” = "D"iversity Pitcher Sage Maximilian Sunflower Cutleaf Daisy Plains Coreopsis Pink Evening Primrose together" "Consider mixing ‘em Eastern Gamagrass Switchgrass Big Bluestem Drainfield Mix $29 each covers 200 sq ft Wetland Fringe Mix Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 2000 sq ft Limestone Guara #3096 Passionflower #3087 Pigeonberry #3119 Prairie Parsley #3156 24 50+ lbs $6.95 / lb 1 lb $44 2000 sq ft Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 1/4 lb $17 500 sq ft White Prickly Poppy #3100 Photo by David K. Northington Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center Item #1807 Red Dome Blanketflower Standing Cypress #3163 #3169 Yellow & Red Blooms Snapdragon Vine #9100 Spiderwort #3123 Height 1-6 feet 1 - 9 lbs $7.95 / lb 10-49 lbs $7.45 / lb Gulf Coast Penstemon #3114 1 pkt $5 20 sq ft Foxglove #3113 Red Columbine #3098 White Winecup #3053 Antelope Horn #3068 Order Online • www.seedsource.com Yellow Prairie Flax #3084 You get 10 times the quantity of seed compared to conservancy packets... making it more economical for you to add these unique plants to your patch of earth. Drainfield Mix - Wetland Fringe Mix For areas that have periodic moist soils such as septic tanks, drainage channels, or detention basins. Native warm season perennial grasses selected for adaptability to a wide range of growing conditions. Cereal rye grain provides quick cool-season cover to help meet county septic system ordinances. Clasping Coneflower Scarlet Sage Spiderwort Illinois Bundleflower Black-Eyed Susan American Basketflower Wildflower D-Paks Photo by Norman G. Flaigg Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center Big Bluestem wi G l r Bushy Bluestem as dfl se ow Cereal Rye Grain s er Eastern Gamagrass s Green Sprangletop Prairie Wildrye Switchgrass White Tridens quantity of seed WILDFLOWER D-PAKS &dSITE SPECIFIC MIXES = diversity 10 x's 25 20 sq ft p.29 Native • 800 728728 4043 N ati vAemerican A mericaSneed S eed 4043 ative merican eed • 800 20 sq ft 3. Broadcast seeds. Use Dam Slope Mix over entire area. Add Wetland Fringe Mix along the bottom 2 feet near the water's edge for color. Include Upper Slope Wildflowers 2ft above water line. 1 pkt $5 Item #1807 Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre 26 26 2. Spread about an inch layer of black compost over the ripped ground to help give seeds a boost. Lightly disc, only one pass on the contour running sideways...not up and down. Again, leave it rough. Clasping Coneflower, Scarlet Sage, Spiderwort, lllinois Bundleflower, Black-Eyed Susan, Pitcher Sage, Maximilian Sunflower, Obedient Plant, Plains Coreopsis, Pink Evening Primrose, American Basketflower 500 sq ft S lope -P ond -B erm 1. Chisel, rip, root plow, cultivate, till or otherwise loosen the front, top and back of dam 2-4'' deep. Make only one pass running sideways on the contour with implement. Use hand tiller if you can't handle a tractor. Do not run up and down the slope; unless using a dozer with steel tracks. Leave surface rough, as clods will help disperse rain drops. Put duals on tractor for severe slopes to stabilize the operation. Always think safety first! A perfect collection of colorful, healing diversity for damaged and disturbed wetland fringe areas. Consider planting together with taller, moisture-loving grasses for erosion control and habitat improvement along water edges.wildflowers 1/4 lb $17 ket p.48 s 1 pkt $5 Wetland Fringe Mix 2000 sq ft 1000 sq ft . 1/4 lb $15 4300 sq ft M 1 lb $39 200 sq ft D am S pe o l ix P lanting T ips : D-Pak $9 in Seeding rate 10 lbs / acre 2000 sq ft s Item #1815 1 lb $20 er Upper Slope Wildflower Mix 1 lb $44 ra Dam Slope Mix Wetland Fringe Mix &D lo w 4. Don't let dozer leave linear up and down cleat marks which will start eroding upon the first rain (see ruts in photo). Keep dozer on site until the last passes are made going up and down the slopes. In this fashion, the dozer will leave cleat marks running with the contour. Cleats could be used to press seeds in. Dozer imprints and use of Erosion Control Blankets will help stop erosion, hold water, enhance germination and provide wind protection to seedlings. Pray for mild rains, no frog stranglers. N at i v e AOrder m e ri ca n S e e•d www.seedsource.com • www.seedsource.com Online Dam Slope Mix - Upper Slope Mix - Wetland Fringe Mix Plant in the fall. Add to your Dam Slope grass mix if you seed in the fall. Or it can be fall-overseeded into your spring-planted Dam Slope grass mix. wildflowers Bluebonnets, Purple Prairie Clover, Partridge Pea, Texas Yellow Star, Gayfeather, White Prairie Clover, Lemon Mint, Plains Coreopsis, Indian Blanket Seeding rate 20 lbs / acre Fr in g e Upper Slope Wildflower Mix uffalograss, Eastern Gamagrass, Green Sprangletop, B Prairie Wildrye, Switchgrass, Little Bluestem, Blue Grama, Sideoats Grama, Curly Mesquite, Indiangrass, Texas Cupgrass, Sand Dropseed, Sand Lovegrass, Bushy Bluestem, Big Bluestem, Cane Bluestem, White Tridens, Western Wheatgrass Item #2808 W etl a n d Blan ion Eros e ld Grasses fi After years of watching hopeful pond constructions followed by dismal failures to establish vegetation, this mixture employs many hardy native grasses known to succeed the unique and often harsh environments found on slopes. If you are planting in September - February, add Cereal Rye Grain at 50% of published rate (see page 61). For example, if you are planting one acre: use 100 lbs of Cereal Rye Grain with 20 lbs of the Dam Slope Mix. Also see upper slope wildflowers. eR oo t . Dam Slope Mix Liv W il d f Site Specific Mixes U pp er S l o pe 27 27 Equipment Learn to become native to your place Lesson #101: (above) Photo depicts careful efforts to control soil loss in a highly erodible situation. Any circumstance where bare soil is receiving concentrations of flowing water is likely to erode. Use of simple processes can enhance your ability to establish native vegetation from seed. This loose, sandy soil project, erosion control efforts were tripled by using hydroseed applications followed by biodegradable straw blankets. Don't Let Land Wash Away! "I really love restoring this land. It gives me such good energy to know I'm bringing back the grasslands to the days of my grandpa." M. Davis "I just wasn't sure... until the owner/developer showed how committed he was to protecting his land. He only wanted natives.. and he wanted it done right.. the first time" New Ulm, Tx Know the differences of hydro-seeding and hydro-mulching. Native seeds really want to touch the earth... as in seedto-soil contact. Ok, let's put the slightest amount of mulch in the tank for a marker only. Load a measure of seed to cover appropriate square footage of ground. Add a dose of compost tea, molasses or other bio-starter. But skip the fertilizer. Natives don't need it, don't want it. Hydro-seed until area is covered with proper seeding rate. Then cap the job with a hydromulch coating. Not too thick - 3/8" thick max. Pray for rain or turn on the water as with any seeding until established. MOST IMPORTANT!!! Before hydro-seeding natives, clean every crook & cranny to remove every livin' last bermuda seed from equipment, truck bed, hose nozzles, floorboard and treads of your shoes. Bermuda, an uncontrollabe invasive grass, does not belong in native plantings. Electric A ll S eed T ypes 2 compartment pickerwheel technology but no hand cranking. Constructed with a tough, cast aluminum frame and bronze bushings, this broadcast seeder ensures long lasting durability. Used for broadcasting chaffy and flowable seed on areas that are too small, too steep, or inaccessible for other types of seeding equipment. Electric gear motor drive for 12 volt system powers the agitator, picker wheels, and seed slinger disc to "sling" seed uniformly. A slide control gate can be adjusted to set the seeding rate for small seed. Includes universal mounting arms for ATV accessory rack. Also suitable for mounting on other motorized vehicles. ATV Electric (all seed) Operated Operated A ll S eed T ypes F ree -F lowing S eed 2 compartments: 1. sliding gate for freeflowing seed 2. pickerwheel technology for chaffy seed Corrosion, tear and weather resistant nylon bag holds up to 25 pounds of seed. Ideal for planting Buffalograss in the spring or Texas Bluebonnets in the fall. Not for use with chaffy seed mixtures. Simple yet effective. Pick up this durable seeder, fill 'er up with native seeds and put in motion the easy-to-turn crank. As you walk in a grid across prepared land, seeds will be evenly distributed on the soil surface. Backpack style shoulder straps are easily adjustable. For small flowable seeds, move the slide control gate to set seeding rate. Sturdy base provides stability for filling and storage. Add chaffy seeds to the bigger compartment with the pickerwheel technology. Spread both types of seeds simultaneously. Item #7061 Hand (all seed) $695 28 28 Hand Hand Planting tip: Seed slingers disperse seeds on the surface of the soil, rake in for better seed to soil contact. This photodegradable straw-fiber blanket is perfect for holding down native seed on slopes, channels and other highly erodible areas. The single-net construction is designed to provide erosion control and mulching on moderate slopes for up to 12 months. Complete English and Spanish instructions included. Divide seed in half. Put out 1/2 going north/south. Put out other 1/2 going east/west. This will insure maximum uniform coverage. Item #7060 Hand (hard seed) $445 N ati vAemerican A mericaSneed S eed 4043 • 800 Native • 800 728728 4043 Erosion Control Blanket 4ft x 135 ft Item #7063 540 sq ft Roll $39 wt 50 lbs Staples Secure the 6 inch long staples using a hammer to keep the straw blankets in place. Recommended 180 staples per roll. Staple installation and pattern guide included with instructions. View Instructional Video seedsource.com click on shop..seeders/eqpt Item #7056 Staples Approximately $20 S/H other sizes available Qty 200 upon request Item #7057 Bag $19 wt 8 lbs $40 N at i v e AOrder m e ri ca n S e e•d www.seedsource.com • www.seedsource.com Online Seed Slingers - Erosion Control Blankets ATV Erosion Control Blanket 29 29 Prairie Starter w & e! o n ve futur a S the into native tallgrass mix Native Sun Turf Sq Ft Area 34% Blue Grama + 66% Buffalograss Item #2850 Item #2851 Item #2852 Item #2854 Item #2853 We know the native people before us, who lived on the land we call Texas, had 445 generations of experience living here. It is the grass, forming the foundation on which life depends, that gives us pure clean waters, clear blue skies and fertile organic soils. You can plant these native seeds and discover for yourself the benefits of prairie! 2,500 sq ft 5,000 sq ft 10,000 sq ft 27,000 sq ft 1 acre - 43,560 sq ft by weight 8 lbs 15 lbs 30 lbs 80 lbs 130 lbs $ 105 $ 195 $ 379 $ 999 $1599 Sq Ft Area Item #2855 Item #2856 Item #2857 Item #2858 Item #2859 2,500 sq ft 5,000 sq ft 6C 10,000 sq ft sq ft 27,000 sq ft 1 acre - 43,560 sq ft less than Height 1-5 feet 10-49 lbs $16.95/lb 50+ lbs $16.25/lb Photo of Texas Nature Conservancy Clymer Meadow in the Blacklands 30 Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 Pounds Value 4% Curly Mesquite + 34% Blue Grama + 62% Buffalograss Item # 2021 Prairie Starter Mix Seeding rate 8 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 5400 sq ft 1-9 lbs $18.50/lb D-Pak $9 Pounds Value Thunder Turf Order Order Online Online •• www.seedsource.com www.seedsource.com 8 lbs 15 lbs 30 lbs 80 lbs 130 lbs $ 151 $ 283 $ 565 $1499 $2399 Prairie Starter Mix - Native Sun Turf - Thunder Turf Blue Grama Buffalograss Green Sprangletop Sand Lovegrass Sideoats Grama Sand Dropseed Little Bluestem Big Bluestem Switchgrass Eastern Gamagrass Indiangrass Prairie Wildrye • Maximum height of grass is 5-8” • NO extra watering once established • NO fertilizer required • NO diseases or pests Why would you ever get on the Bermudagra$$ or $t. Augustine monoculture treadmill? By planting non-native exotic grass, your time, money and energy may be wasted. Activities such as replanting each year, spraying dangerous chemicals, working hours or days each week on boring maintenance or worse yet — continual watering of exotics may be required. All are unwise choices for our budgets, the quality of our water, and our land. Give yourself and the land a break! Plant native turf grass in full sun from spring to late summer / early fall (needs 60 days of growth before first frost). For eons, land, water and sky were all stitched together by the plants. The prairie grass was especially good at making deep fibrous roots, which in turn became humus-rich organic soils. Those same roots, some species over 20 feet deep, protected the soil during and after each rainfall. The roots served as a sponge and a living filter. Clean fresh water was preserved in the soil to be released slowly over time. The rainwater that could not be absorbed was filtered clean as it traveled across the grassland and into the waterways. Immense amounts of green leafy vegetation found on the prairie served to not only filter water but also absorb carbon from the air...and release back out pure oxygen. Organic soil. Fresh water. Fresh air. Native plants. Less than 150 years ago, the great North American prairie stretched from Mexico to Canada. During the past five or six generations, 99% of the prairie has been consumed by 1) grazing, 2) farming and 3) urbanization. These three major influences on the prairie are intertwined. All classes of livestock find native prairie grasses to be highly palatable. Farmers enjoyed the benefit of fertile prairie soils. Ultimately, our cities and road systems have centered on the best prairie land. Today, less than .004% of the tallgrass prairie remains in Texas. Cut maintenance cost and time in half N ative Grass Mixes Lawns & high-traffic spaces Native Sun Turf Thunder Turf 2 shortgrass kits for N ative 31 31 ECO REGIONS Eco-Region Map ESE High Plains oth VE TI Ozark Highlands cos ah ua nD t Tamaulipan Brush Country es er tT s air sc lls hi Sa nd C Bl ack lan d air ie Southeastern Plains Coastal Savannahs Southeastern Plains map adapted from Texas Parks and Wildlife Department United States Department of Agriculture United States Environmental Protection Agency ie lf ihu oa r tP re p i Va l ley ssip ssi sst Mi at Pla ins Gre al ntr Ce Edwards Plateau C -Pe Sand Sheet ra ns -P ec os Joanne Shenandoah Prophecy Song, The Iroquois Nation im ber s P O Bl a B rai lac ac k w rie k land kl o an od P r a i r i e s P d Pr rai air rie ie Tran s Llano Uplift t Gu Ch The words say we are to awaken, stand up, be counted, for you are being recognized in the spirit world. Rol Cro Chihuahuan D esert And to fulfill our obligations to ourselves, our families, nations, the natural world, to the creator. Pineywoods n Of something that only yesterday was so vast, how can it be that so little remains? we have seeds native to these eco-regions Cochise Rims and Basins Pr dm o Coastal Savannahs d High Plains an Sonoran Desert e Pi ckl ling l en Plains F oth lls o i ai n li o Bla R We are now reminded to be aware of our place upon this Earth, Flint Hills Prairie ns Fo High Plains Pl S S A g WE E HAV D EE N Osage Prairie ills TO TH Central Great Plains WHAT IS A NATIVE? Six Story Sequence Photo of Flinthills Prairie in Kansas T Native American Seed harvests and sells only the seeds native to the eco-regions on the centerfold map in this catalog. We do not offer any seeds from India, China, Peru, Germany or Chile. We encourage people to consider planting original prairie species. What could be better? What could be smarter? What could be more sustainable? W hat is a That next summer we found ourselves on the Blackland Prairie with dry, cracked open soil. I remember my buffalo cousin stepped in a deep crack in the black clay and broke her ankle. She was born up in northern Kansas and had been separated from her family last year during a wildfire. The move south was too much for her. She never did adapt to the hot summer and sure enough that cracked ground and broken ankle did her in. the truth of the matter is those seeds just didn’t digest very well. Some were laid out in little piles on the ground by the banks of the Brazos. We didn’t know anything about bagged fertilizer back then, but those Black-Eyed Susan seeds readily sprouted. You could hear the young sprouts mentioning to the old time residents that they felt at home and looked familiar, as in family. Americas Before Columbus by Charles C. Mann 541 pp, softcover ITEM #6046 As time went the Black-Eyed Susans could be heard saying what a good neighborly exchange had been made. They felt stronger because of joining together as a family. “We could get along for an eternity doing this. Your kids and my kids can sustain for a long time,” they said. The surviving buffalo were all in agreement even though many changes are known to be coming. And that is the way of it. At this moment it was said... $15.95 2. Cabeza de Vaca's Adventures in the Unknown Interior of America 160 pp, 3. ITEM #6042 softcover $17.00 One Vast Winters Count Native American West before Lewis & Clark by Calloway 597 pp, hardcover ITEM #6043 $19.95 4. The Worst Hard Time by Timothy Egan Pulitzer Prize winner. 340 pp, We buffalo spoke among the Black-Eyed Susan sprouts that autumn and then again to the flowers in the spring. The bees and the butterflies were buzzing around mixing up the pollen grains of the new black-eyes with the old black-eyes and all the neighbors got to know each other. And just maybe the slightest little chromosomes were exchanged, thanks to us and the bees. The newcomers from the Red River contributed a little strength to protect from cold snaps that come along with those blue northers. The Red River N ati vAemerican A mericaSneed S eed 4043 • 800 Native • 800 728728 4043 1. 1491 New Revelations of the ITEM #6044 softcover $14.95 5. Hard Scrabble Observations on a Patch of Land by John Graves 271 pp, softcover ITEM #6047 $14.95 6. My Ishmael by Daniel Quinn 304 pp, softcover ITEM #6045 $18.00 “Some things will never change. Native plants will always belong. And don’t be afraid to make a move.” N at i v e AOrder m e ri ca n S e e•d www.seedsource.com • www.seedsource.com Online native plants will always belong Being the kind of day it was and the type of breakfast we had up on the Red River, well 34 34 black-eye was accustomed to cold weather. And then, of course, the Waco family of black-eyes gave little secrets to the Red River black-eyes that taught how to live in the heat of a summer drought. N ative ? Consider about how far can a buffalo run. The ways of the buffalo can give us simple truths. Try being yourself, the largest mammal remaining on the continent. You might be found on the red earth bank of a river in Oklahoma. The native meadow lay before you with lush prairie grasses making their nutritious seedheads. Sunflowers and gayfeathers are bountiful. As you graze, the daytime heats up into an afternoon thunderstorm. Bolts of lightening crash down by your side. Being very scared, all your family of brothers and sisters, aunts, uncles, mom, dad and your great grandmother take to the hoof running. All run with you ‘til dark and most end up in Texas around Waco on the Brazos River. Others in the tribe ran a different way and were never to be seen again. hinking of scattering seeds around your place? Wondering which seeds belong? Knowing what happened in the past is essential to make meaningful, lasting changes to the future. Read this series in order. Learn what has occurred over the course of human history that got us to where we are right now. Learn to better understand where we should be going from here. 35 35 "Where Blue Flax Wildflowers bloom, so does hope." Common Name Sand > Caliche > X All day full sun w Half day full sun, half day shade Sunlight filtered through leaves b l Less than two hours of sun Loam Sand perennial bloom May – Sept height 1 – 2 feet Botanical name Soil Type Loam Clay > > Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w b Soil Moisture Shade l Sand > Moist Item #3148 annual - completes its life cycle from seed through maturity, then reseeding itself in one year or season. most annuals should be planted summer/fall for spring blooms Item #3139 Full Sunlight Partial Dappled X 1/4 lb $15 Medium-Moist Item # 1013 1 pkt $5 Item #1007 36 1 lb $24 Asclepias tuberosa Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w b 1/4 lb $9 Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 1 oz $5 1 lb $189 Caliche seeding Rate 10 lb per acre 1 oz per 275 sq ft Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1/4 lb $55 b Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $23 Well Drained 1 pkt $5 Dracopis amplexicaulis seeding rate 3 lb per acre 1 oz per 900 sq ft Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $19 Caliche Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1/4 lb $8 Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $5 Medium-Moist 1 pkt $3 Helianthus annuus A patch of these sunflowers in your flower bed will be a welcome site to numerous birds and butterflies offering you hours of beauty and wonder. Can be also planted in fields for dove, quail and songbirds to use as food. A favorite of the American Goldfinch. The young sprouts are perty tasty on salads for humans too! seeding rate 5 lb per acre 1 oz per 550 sq ft annual bloom: May - Oct height 2 - 8' Sand > Soil Moisture Shade Soil Type Loam Clay > > Common Sunflower Rudbeckia hirta seeding rate 2 lb per acre 1 oz per 1350 sq ft Caliche Sand > Sand > Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $9 annual/ short lived perennial bloom May – Nov height 1 – 3 feet Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 pkt $6 annual bloom: Apr - June height 1 - 2' This familiar old-time plant is easy to grow in a wide variety of locations and soil conditions. During years of drought it may remain dormant, waiting until favorable rainfall occurs. A good nectar plant for butterflies, and deer resistant. Sand > Dry Very easy to grow. Often found along drainages or bottomland farm fields when left fallow after cultivation. Clasping Coneflower is named for the way the base of the leaves clasp themselves around the stem of the plant. Grows from Georgia to Texas. seeding rate 10 lb per acre 1 oz per 275 sq ft B l a c k -E y e d S u s a n Clasping Coneflower Centaurea americana annual bloom: May - June height 2 - 5' 1 lb $39 w Soil Moisture Shade perennial bloom May – Sep height 10 - 20 inches Turn over this three inch bloom and look at the intricately woven basket underneath! Butterflies flock to this flower and it provides good food for dove and quail. It blooms profusely in springtime. Seeds are large with hard shells that need winter exposure to open. Item #1010 X Sunlight Partial Dappled perennial - lives years from a permanent root system. can be planted most anytime American Basketflower Caliche Full biennial - requires 2 years to complete the life cycle. can be planted most anytime Caliche Soil Type Loam Clay > > Caliche > “My first thought was that I had seen a ‘burning bush.’ The fiery-orange blooms of the butterfly weed are vivid beyond belief. Butterflies frantically flit from flower to flower.” - Zoe Kirkpatrick in her book, Wildflowers of the Western Plains. A plant that does equally well in home garden and in wilder spaces. packet covers 20 sq ft Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > seeding rate 8 lb per acre 1 oz per 350 sq ft B u t t e r f l y We e d Picture of emergent seedling Clay Linum lewisii For those who live west of IH-35, this blue wildflower offers summer to early fall blooms that are about an inch across, opening in the morning and dropping their petals by the afternoon. You’ll have new blooms each morning throughout the flowering season. It likes to be planted in sand, but will tolerate other well drained soils. Lady Bird Johnson 1912 - 2007 suggested seeding rates can be increased 3-4 times for fuller coverage sooner Wildflowers Well Drained Item # 1028 1 pkt $3 1 lb $11 Soil Type Loam Clay > > Caliche > Full X 1/4 lb $7 Order Online • www.seedsource.com Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1 oz $5 Soil Moisture Shade Moist 1 pkt $3 37 Gayfeather Take a virtual tour! Junction Middle School raingarden www.youtube.com/seedsource Wildflowers Liatris mucronata An important plant in the fall during butterfly and hummingbird migrations, this perennial sometimes requires two years before making a bloom. Strong roots grow down as deep as 16 feet, and will easily cling to any poor, infertile, well-drained soil. Also makes a good cut flower. perennial bloom Aug – Dec height 1 – 3 feet SCHOOL GARDENS Native plants can help to grow your community as well as provide wildlife habitat! Cutleaf Daisy Item #1020 Item #1014 Sand > 1 lb $34 Caliche > Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1/4 lb $11 Drummond Phlox b 1 oz $8 Medium Item #1030 1 pkt $5 Item #3059 1 lb $39 Caliche Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1/4 lb $15 Foxglove b 1 oz $9 Well Drained Item # 1809 1 pkt $3 Item #3113 38 38 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w Native • 800 728728 4043 N ati A v emerican A mericaSneed S eed 4043 • 800 D-Pak $29 1 pkt $5 Liatris pycnostachya seeding rate 10 lb per acre 1 oz per 275 sq ft Soil Type Loam Clay > > Caliche Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1/4 lb $29 Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $17 Medium-Moist 1 pkt $5 Coreopsis basalis seeding rate 3 lb per acre 1 oz per 900 sq ft Soil Type Sand Loam Clay > 1 lb $49 Caliche Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1/4 lb $19 b Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $13 Well Drained 1 pkt $5 Thelesperma filifolium annual / perennial bloom Feb – Nov height 12 inches Sand > Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $17 Well Drained This dependable bloomer shows its golden heads throughout the year after adequate rainfall. Often found growing in shallow soils, the ripened seeds are a food source for the painted bunting. Also a good larval for butterflies, it is found from Arkansas across to Colorado and down to Mexico. seeding rate 4 lb per acre 1 oz per 675 sq ft Caliche > Sand > G re e n t h re a d Penstemon cobaea Wild Foxglove is one of the loveliest springtime sights on the prairie. It spends most of the year as a small, insignificant rosette, then shoots up 1 foot stems before blooming in the spring. Each purple to white bloom is about 2–3 inches long, arranged upon the stem in magnificent clusters. perennial bloom Apr – May height 12 – 18” annual bloom: Apr - Jul height 8 - 16" Soil Moisture Shade w Soil Moisture Shade Golden-Wave is a foundation plant in many wildflower meadows throughout central Texas. It is found on sandy and limestone soils of prairies and woodland openings. Abundant over much of the area from the eastern half of Texas west to New Mexico. seeding rate 10 lb per acre 1 oz per 275 sq ft Soil Type Sand Loam Clay > X Sunlight Partial Dappled 1/4 lb $29 G o l d e n -Wa v e Phlox Drummondii The range of this wildflower is the grasslands, hillsides and woodland openings in east, south and central Texas. Note its preference for sandy sites. The flowers often form solid blankets of color. annual bloom: Mar - June height 6 - 18" Full perennial bloom Aug – Dec height 1 – 3 feet Soil Moisture Shade 1 lb $69 Caliche > Sometimes called Blazing Star in the northern regions, this plant is found throughout the tallgrass prairies. We found this perennial growing in thick stands on damp, sandy clay near the Katy prairies. Adapted to the 30-40” rainfall areas from the Gulf of Mexico north through the Blacklands and open bottomlands of the Piney woods. seeding rate 18 lb per acre 1 oz per 150 sq ft Soil Type Loam Clay > > Soil Type Loam Clay > > G a y f e a t h e r, B l a z i n g S t a r Engelmannia pinnatifida Also called Engelmann Daisy, this is a reliable plant during times of drought. It attracts sparrows, painted buntings and finches, and grows in a wide variety of soils from Nebraska to Colorado to Mexico. We have witnessed turkeys and ladybugs nesting in our farm patch. perennial bloom Feb – Nov height 1 – 3 feet Sand > seeding rate 10 lb per acre 1 oz per 275 sq ft Well Drained Item #1026 1 pkt $6 1 lb $39 Soil Type Loam Clay > > seeding rate 6 lb per acre 1 oz per 450 sq ft Caliche > Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled 1/4 lb $15 N at i v e AOrder m e ri ca n S e e•d www.seedsource.com Online • www.seedsource.com 1 oz $9 Soil Moisture Shade Well Drained 1 pkt $5 39 39 Huisache Daisy Lanceleaf Amblyolepis setigera Item #3130 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > seeding rate 8 lb per acre 1 oz per 350 sq ft Caliche > Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1/4 lb $15 1 oz $9 Illinois Bundleflower perennial bloom May – July height 2 – 3 feet Soil Moisture Shade Sand > Well Drained Item #3056 1 pkt $6 Item #3075 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $24 Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1/4 lb $9 Indian Blanket b 1 oz $5 Sand > Medium Moist Item #1005 Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $20 1/4 lb $8 Indian Paintbrush Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1 oz $5 Well Drained Item #1006 1 pkt $3 Item #1011 40 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > Full X Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 Sunlight Partial Dappled 1 pkt $3 Aphanostephus sp. Soil Type Loam Clay > seeding rate 1 lb per acre 1 oz per 2700 sq ft Caliche Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $49 Medium 1 pkt $6 Monarda citriodora Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $20 seeding rate 3 lb per acre 1 oz per 900 sq ft Caliche 1/4 lb $8 Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1 oz $5 Soil Moisture Shade Well Drained 1 pkt $3 Helianthus maximiliani perennial bloom Aug – Oct height 4 – 6 feet Soil Moisture Shade Well Drained Easy to grow and very grand, the Maximilian Sunflower is a beautiful plant even before it blooms, forming a circular-shaped colony that needs lots of space to express itself. It likes moist soils, and provides food in the form of seed for birds and small mammals. A good larval plant for butterflies, and important nectar source for butterflies and bees. seeding rate 0.25 lb per acre 1 oz per 11000 sq ft Caliche 1 oz $5 Maximilian Sunflower Castilleja indivisa The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center found that this plant grows in companion with thin grasses on which it attaches its roots. Good larval food source and nectar plant for butterflies. Grows well in parts of Texas and Oklahoma. annual bloom: Mar - May height 6 - 18" b annual bloom: May - July height 1 - 3' Soil Moisture Shade w Soil Moisture Shade This native annual grows from Missouri to Kansas to Mexico. Aromatic foliage makes this plant deer resistant. Citriodora is used as a natural insect repellent. Native Americans incorporated the use of its leaves for edible greens, seasoning, and an aromatic tea. seeding rate 10 lb per acre 1 oz per 275 sq ft Caliche Sunlight Partial Dappled 1/4 lb $8 Lemon Mint Gaillardia pulchella This is a favorite of folklore stories. It grows widely across the region from the gulf coastal beaches northward through Oklahoma and beyond. It is easy to grow in mixtures of springtime wildflowers. Indian Blanket is rarely eaten by deer and has a special relationship with fireflies. State flower of Oklahoma. Sand > X Item #3064 1 pkt $3 annual bloom: May - July height 1 - 2' Full annual bloom: Mar - Jun height 4 - 16" Soil Moisture Shade 1 lb $19 Caliche For early spring blooms, this short annual provides a sparkling white ray-like flower with a bright yellow center. Abundant in Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas, southern Mississippi, Alabama, and the panhandle of Florida. seeding rate 15 lb per acre 1 oz per 175 sq ft Caliche > seeding rate 10 lb per acre 1 oz per 275 sq ft Soil Type Loam Clay > > Lazy Daisy Desmanthus illinoensis A native legume that is often found on prairies, and abundantly in times of above-average rainfall. This plant is highly palatable to livestock and the seeds are an important food source for quail, turkey and other ground birds. Its delicate white blossoms give way to interesting seedheads in the late summer / early fall. perennial bloom May - Sep height 1 – 3 feet Coreopsis lanceolata Easy to establish and evergreen, Lanceleaf Coreopsis grows in a variety of conditions and soils including dappled sunlight at the edges of wooded areas. Whether you call it “Tickseed” depends on what part of the country you’re from! Range is most of central, midwestern and southeastern US and northern New Mexico. Blooming profusely for about two months in mid spring, this short annual is particularly good for home plantings or mass plantings in fields or roadsides. Huisache Daisy is becoming a favorite. Makes good nectar plant for butterflies. annual bloom: Apr - Jun height 6 - 18" Wildflowers c o re o p s i s Well Drained Item #1018 1 pkt $5 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $49 seeding rate 4 lb per acre 1 oz per 675 sq ft Caliche Full X 1/4 lb $19 Order Online • www.seedsource.com Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1 oz $13 Soil Moisture Shade Medium-Moist 1 pkt $5 41 Mealy Blue Sage P i n k E v e n i n g P r i m ro s e Salvia farinacea This beautiful native prairie plant is very drought tolerant, blooming with little rainfall even on poor, shallow soils. Deer don’t appreciate its aromatic scent, so it will thrive nicely where other, more palatable forbs might have a hard time settling in. Has been used by tribal peoples as a healing plant, and the leaves make a refreshing tea. perennial bloom Apr – May height 1 – 3 feet Item #1027 Pink Evening Primrose is semi-evergreen, and makes a good ground cover. It also provides a nice splash of diversity in a lawn or landscape. Grows throughout much of the southeastern US and west through Texas into Mexico - and up through the plains states of Oklahoma, Missouri and Kansas. seeding rate 6 lb per acre 1 oz per 450 sq ft Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > > > 1/4 lb $30 Mexican Hat Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w perennial bloom Mar – July height 1 – 2 feet Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $12 Sand > Well Drained Item #1022 1 pkt $6 Sand > Item #1004 1 lb $19 Caliche > Full Sunlight Partial Dappled X w 1/4 lb $8 Partridge Pea 1 oz $5 Well Drained Item #1025 1 pkt $3 Item #1016 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $24 Full Sunlight Partial Dappled X w Well Drained Item #1003 1/4 lb $9 Pigeonberry 1 oz $5 1 pkt $3 Item #3119 42 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > Full Sunlight Partial Dappled w b Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 D-Pak $29 1 pkt $3 Salvia azurea Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > seeding rate 3 lb per acre 1 oz per 900 sq ft Caliche > Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w Soil Moisture Shade Medium 1 pkt $6 Coreopsis tinctoria Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $19 seeding rate 2 lb per acre 1 oz per 1350 sq ft Caliche Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1/4 lb $8 Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $5 Medium-Moist 1 pkt $3 Ratibida columnifera perennial bloom Apr – July height 1 – 3 feet Soil Moisture Shade l Medium Moist Cousin to the Mexican Hat, but without the extra splash of “Ole!” the Prairie Coneflower is a good nectar plant for butterflies, and unpalatable to deer, goats, sheep and cattle. Prolific and easy to grow in almost any well drained soil. seeding rate 6 lb per acre 1 oz per 500 sq ft Caliche Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $13 Prairie Coneflower Rivina humilis Birds love the bright red berries of this hardy, low-growing native, and during bloom season the berries often start appearing alongside the delicate pink and white blossoms that give birth to them. We’ve got Pigeonberry planted in many different spots on our land, including under trees and even under our carport where no sun ever reaches - and they do just fine! perennial bloom May – Oct height 1 – 2 feet w annual bloom: Mar - July height 1 - 2' Soil Moisture Shade X Sunlight Partial Dappled An easy to grow native annual. Good for roadside plantings. It grows in areas with 15 or more inches of rainfall all the way to the East Coast. Plains Coreopsis is a good nectar plant for butterflies. Native Americans made tea from flowers to strengthen the blood. We have used it as a nurse crop in combination with native prairie grass plantings. seeding rate 20 lb per acre 1 oz per 130 sq ft Caliche Full 1/4 lb $23 P l a i n s C o re o p s i s Cassia fasciculata This native prairie legume has the ability to add nitrogen to the soil. Partridge Pea is a good bloomer in the heat of the summer and a good food source for dove, quail, turkey and numerous songbirds. Grows from central US to the east coast. annual bloom: June - Oct height 1 - 3' Caliche > perennial bloom May – Nov height 2 – 3 feet Soil Moisture Shade 1 lb $64 seeding rate 1 lb per acre 1 oz per 2700 sq ft One of the tallest native salvias, this plant can be found growing in small colonies in rich, fertile tallgrass prairies. Its aromatic scent makes it deer resistant, and it blooms well into the fall under favorable conditions. Grows from South Carolina across to Nebraska and down to Mexico. seeding rate 2 lb per acre 1 oz per 1350 sq ft Soil Type Loam Clay > > Soil Type Loam Clay > > Pitcher Sage Ratibida columnifera Prolific and widespread throughout the prairie regions, Mexican Hat is a good nectar plant for butterflies - and deer, goats, sheep and cattle absolutely refuse to eat it! Hence its reputation as a “weed” not particularly welcomed by ranchers. Very easy to grow, from Minnesota and Montana down to Louisiana and across to Mexico. perennial bloom Apr – July height 1 – 3 feet Wildflowers Oenothera speciosa Moist - Dry Item #1029 1 pkt $6 Sand > 1 lb $39 Soil Type Loam Clay > > seeding rate 2 lb per acre 1 oz per 1350 sq ft Caliche > Full X 1/4 lb $15 Order Online • www.seedsource.com Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1 oz $9 Soil Moisture Shade Well Drained 1 pkt $5 43 P r a i r i e Ve r b e n a Scarlet Sage Glandularia bipinnatifida var. bipinnatifida Hardy and versatile, this tough plant can thrive in a wide variety of conditions. It can be evergreen in southern regions in the winter, and is quite happy to grow in dappled sunlight under the trees. We have it around our guest cabin at the farm, where it attracts hummingbirds throughout the summer. It’s deer resistant, too. This low, trailing or creeping perennial is drought tolerant and long-blooming. Ranges throughout the Great Plains and portions of the Southwest. Masses of purple blooms and a sweet fragrance attract butterflies. It will also grow nicely in a pot - just don’t use the potting soil that comes with extra fertilizers built in. perennial bloom Mar – Oct height 4 – 12 inches Item #3067 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > perennial bloom May – Oct height 6 – 30 inches seeding rate 2 lb per acre 1 oz per 1530 sq ft Caliche > Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w Purple Coneflower Sand > Soil Moisture Shade Medium Item #3073 1 pkt $6 Item #1023 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $33 Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1/4 lb $13 b 1 oz $6 Well Drained Item #1009 1 pkt $3 P urple C oneflower , N arrow L eaf Item #1015 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $99 Full X w 1/4 lb $38 Well Drained Item #3123 1 pkt $5 Photo by David Northington Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center Item #1021 Sand 1 lb $33 Soil Type Loam Clay > > Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled 1/4 lb $13 Native • 800 728728 4043 N ati vA emerican A mericaSneed S eed 4043 • 800 1 oz $8 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > seeding rate 2 lb per acre 1 oz per 1350 sq ft Caliche Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled 1/4 lb $38 Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $26 Medium 1 pkt $6 Tradescantia occidentalis Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > seeding rate 10 lb per acre 1 oz per 275 sq ft Caliche > Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w b Soil Moisture Shade D-Pak $29 Medium-Moist 1 pkt $6 Ipomopsis rubra biennial bloom May – June height 2 – 5 feet Soil Moisture Shade 1 pkt $3 A spectacular red flowering biennial that attracts butterflies and hummingbirds in droves. It thrives in a wide range of soils from caliche to rich bottomlands, from North Carolina to Florida and across the south to Texas, and can grow up to five feet tall. May also bloom the second spring after planting. seeding rate 4 lb per acre 1 oz per 675 sq ft Caliche > Medium-Moist Corydalis curvisiliqua S t a n d i n g C y p re s s Dalea purpurea var. purpurea Nature has its own way of healing damaged lands, and this legume is but one of many. It is often found growing on severely eroded land or depleted soils, including rocky limestone and caliche. The seeds are an important food source for quail and other ground birds. perennial bloom June – July height 1 – 3 feet 1 oz $9 perennial bloom Apr – June height 12 – 18 inches Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz $26 Purple Prairie Clover 44 44 Sunlight Partial Dappled Soil Moisture Shade With its wide blue-green leaf blades, this plant looks almost like an ornamental grass. Often called “Prairie Spiderwort” or “Western Spiderwort,” it grows in the prairie states all the way up to Canada, east through Louisiana and west into Arizona. Commonly found in moist but well drained areas. seeding rate 10 lb per acre 1 oz per 275 sq ft Caliche Sunlight Partial Dappled w b 1/4 lb $15 Spiderwort Echinacea angustifolia More rare and more site specific than Echinacea purpurea, this plant likes well drained slopes in the tallgrass prairie regions. Good nectar plant for butterflies. Thick stands are rarely found in the wild, probably due to over-harvesting in the late 1800s for medicinal uses. All parts of this plant including roots can be used for this purpose. perennial bloom May – June height 2 feet Full X annual bloom: Feb - Apr height 8 - 10" Soil Moisture Shade 1 lb $39 Caliche > Flowers in early spring with a 6-8 week bloom time. This plant is found in open fields or along roadsides. These seeds are a favorite food source for dove in late spring. Easy to grow. Sow seed in fall. seeding rate 10 lb per acre 1 oz per 275 sq ft Caliche Soil Type Loam Clay > > seeding rate 8 lb per acre 1 oz per 350 sq ft Scrambled Eggs Echinacea purpurea This easy to grow native perennial is often used in garden landscapes, and is one of the very best plants to attract butterflies. Will last for a week or longer as a cut flower if you refresh the water regularly...can be planted in Spring or Fall. perennial bloom Apr – May height 2 feet Wildflowers Salvia coccinea Medium Moist Item #3082 1 pkt $5 Sand > 1lb $59 Soil Type Loam Clay > > seeding rate 6 lb per acre 1 oz per 450 sq ft Caliche > Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1/4 lb $21 N at i v e A Order m e ri ca n S e e •d www.seedsource.com Online • www.seedsource.com b 1 oz $15 Soil Moisture Shade Well Drained 1 pkt $5 45 45 Ta h o k a D a i s y White Prickly Poppy Machaeranthera tanacetifolia If you want to attract dove, this is the native plant to do it! Birds love the seeds just as much as the common sunflower. This plant offers early-season food supply. Blooms are big, 4-5 inches across. Be aware of the stickery fibers that protect the plant. A prolific annual that spreads easily, this is our native poppy. Sow this seed thickly to create a succession of blooms for a six-month period. Single plants may be in flower for two months then go to seed. They look great on a rocky slope. This is one of the showiest wildflowers for the fall. Its range is Canada to Mexico. Photo Zoe M. Kirkpatrick Item #3138 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $74 Caliche > Full Sunlight Partial Dappled X w 1/4 lb $32 Te x a s B l u e b o n n e t Sand > Soil Moisture Shade 1 oz. $18 Well Drained Item #1002 Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $16.49 Full Sunlight Partial Dappled X 1/4 lb $7.25 Te x a s Ye l l o w S t a r 1 oz $4.85 Well Drained Item #3053 1 pkt $4 Item #3141 Soil Type Loam Clay > > 1 lb $49 Caliche Full X 1/4 lb $19 Shade Well Drained 1 pkt $5 Photo by Robert Sloan Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center Item #1024 1 lb $49 Full Sunlight Partial Dappled X 1/4 lb $19 Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 1 oz $13 Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w b Soil Moisture Shade D-Pak $29 Well Drained 1 pkt $6 Callirhoe leiocarpa seeding rate 4 lb per acre 1 oz per 675 sq ft Soil Type Loam Clay > > Caliche > Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w b Soil Moisture Shade D-Pak $29 Well Drained 1 pkt $6 Callirhoe involucrata perennial bloom Feb – June height 6 – 12 inches Soil Moisture Shade Caliche > The wine-colored blooms of this low-growing perennial make a beautiful addition to home gardens, providing spring and early summer color across the prairie states from Texas to North Dakota and as far west as Utah. Rosettes remain green in the winter. In the photo at left, a beneficial soldier beetle (cousin to the lightning bug) is at work. seeding rate 3 lb per acre 1 oz per 900 sq ft Caliche > 1 pkt $6 seeding rate 5 lb per acre 1 oz per 550 sq ft Soil Type Loam Clay > > Winecup White Prairie Clover ranges from Canada to Mexico, and like its cousin Purple Prairie Clover is a legume that captures nitrogen from the air and stores it in nodules on the roots. Plant it with other legumes and short grasses on thin soils, or highly erodable land, to begin a healing process and rebuild soil fertility. Soil Type Sand Loam Clay > Well Drained Callirhoe involucrata var. lineariloba Item #1032 Dalea candida var. candida perennial bloom June – July height 2 – 3 feet Sand > Sand > Soil Moisture 1 oz $13 White Prairie Clover 46 w D-pak $29 annual bloom: Mar - May height 1 - 3' seeding rate 12 lb per acre 1 oz per 225 sq ft Sunlight Partial Dappled b Soil Moisture Shade We stumbled upon this beauty on a backroad not far from the farm. Growing along a wooded edge, we gathered a few seeds and planted them the day after 9-11. Easy to grow, serves as a great reminder that each of us has the right and responsibility to create a little spot of health on an ailing planet. Texas Yellow Star begins flowering when 2 inches tall, and continues blooming while growing taller. In a cultivated flower beds we’ve seen it get up to 30" tall with hundreds of blooms. Beautiful dried seed heads! Sand > w Winecup, Annual Lindheimera texana annual bloom: Mar - Oct height 6 - 20" X Sunlight Partial Dappled perennial bloom Feb – June height 6 - 12 inches Soil Moisture Shade Full Delicate looking but durable and long-lived, the snow-white petals of White Winecup are sometimes streaked with red or purple. The plant produces strong root tubers that help it spread gradually over the years. Low growing and green in winter in the southern regions of its range. seeding rate 20 lb per acre 1 oz per 130 sq ft Caliche > Caliche > White Winecup Lupinus texensis The state flower of Texas! Prefers hillsides and well drained areas. Bluebonnets are thought to have originated on the granitic soils of the Llano Uplift. Because Texas Bluebonnet is an annual plant, next year's crop will only grow from previous years' seeds. Allow your wildflowers to fully mature and ripen their seeds before mowing. Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > Item #3100 1 pkt $5 annual bloom: Mar - May height 6 - 20" seeding rate 10 lb per acre 1 oz per 275 sq ft annual bloom: Mar - July height 2 - 4' seeding rate 5 lb per acre 1 oz per 550 sq ft annual bloom: May - Oct. height 4 - 16" Wildflowers Argemone albiflora Well Drained Item #3052 1 pkt $5 Sand > seeding rate 5 lb per acre 1 oz per 550 sq ft Soil Type Loam Clay > > Caliche > Full X 1/4 lb $89 Order Online • www.seedsource.com Sunlight Partial Dappled w 1 oz $38 b Soil Moisture Shade Well Drained 1 pkt $6 47 weddings 20 or more bundles business cards $15 each bundle events (1000+ packets) political campaigns educational groups gift baskets party bags table decorations school classes fundraisers thank employees customer gifts special occasions Item #4006 exhibits conferences holiday get-together Message family reunions birthday favors 1-19 bundles $25 each bundle (50-950 packets) 01 Item #40 ssage e M r u Yo TS h R OO e a c l u 9 $1 ndf ha Your HAVE AN IDEA 4 YOUR O WN DESIGN ? sure! give us a Big Bluestem Plateau 4000 Andropogon gerardii TS h R OO e a c l u 9 $1 ndf nts ha pla ing 5 nd ies 1 5 pe ec call de sp on Packet size is standard h4.5" x w3.25" 500 mg seed per pkt Our men gathered some tools together and headed out to the rescue of some Eastern Gamagrass on the late RC Mauldin's home place near Waco. While we were planting the roots back at the Junction farm, bulldozers leveled RC's lifetime of work for a new subdivision. These roots are now growing and happily multiplying in hopes that you may benefit from these men's work. R.C. Mauldin was an elder and mentor to many people of rangeland, soil and water conservation work in the early-mid 1900's. Order 1 bundle + we'll automatically include a 2nd for free! Sale applies to all eco-types. Live Roots Artemesia Artemisia ludoviciana #2516 silver-gray foliage, fragrant crushed or burned. the ancients made smudge sticks to cleanse tipi, heart ‘n soul Maximilian Sunflower Helianthus maximiliani #2501 Gamagrass Blackland Tripsacum dactyloides Gayfeather (sold individually) Liatris mucronata $3.95 each #2519 thrives in well-drained soils. butterflies flock to this great nectar source in fall migration (p 39) Tall Goldenrod Solidago altissima #2503 great for stabilizing wet areas and a nectar producer for fall butterflies 48 #2505 this eco-type from the blackland prairie. all gamagrasses are excellent streambank stabilizers loves moist areas, this perennial sunflower produces nutritional seeds for birds in late fall (p 41) Gamagrass Plateau Tripsacum dactyloides We now offer live roots by the handful in the hopes that they may thrive on your land too. We have come to know these plants by their strength and ability to grow and spread. These plants are especially useful in erosion control, wetland and wildlife habitat restoration. We dig and ship roots every Tuesday. Please be ready to plant & water your roots A.S.A.P. after receipt of order. Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 #2504 formerly the most dominant grass on the tall grass prairie. found this eco-type at 2000' above sea level on far west end of edwards plateau Guadalupe Switchgrass Panicum virgatum #2518 wildlife habitat plant found on river banks in tx. hill coutry. great for wet or highly erosion prone areas Prairie Wildrye Elymus canadensis #2512 Texas Bluegrass #2507 Poa arachnifera uncommon cool season evergreen perennial. loves shade or full sun. short 8-10", really easy & fast to grow Texas Cupgrass Eriochloa sericea #2515 good native prairie indicator, though mostly grazed out. birds love the nutritional seeds (p 56) Texas Wintergrass Nasella leucotricha #2513 12-14" ht, lush cool season growth. dormant in summer, but stays green, requiring no mow, no water (p 57) Upland Switchgrass #2511 Panicum virgatum fast growing, highly productive forage grass with deep perennial roots. this eco-type from central Texas not as aggressive and blends well with other upland grasses and forbs. excellent for birds & mammals (p 56) Gamagrass Rolling Plains #2506 Waco Indiangrass eco-type from north Texas area. gamagrass often grows on uplands in the deeper soils a new addition to our root offerings. seed also available by the lb. grows 3-4' ht with fall bloom (p 53) Tripsacum dactyloides #2500 lush cool season perennial evergreen grass. sun or shade (p 54) Eastern Gamagrass Sale Wildflower Grass Live Roots Two wildflower packet designs created to allow space for Your Message. Order them as is & we ship fast (make your own message using stick-on labels) OR better yet Call us! With a minimum order of 1,000 & 60 days notice, we can personalize any type of seed packet. Values depend on technical requirements of design. Order Gift Packets without personalization: Item # L IVE ROOTS Gift Packets: Bundles of 50 each Sorghastrum nutans Order Online • www.seedsource.com #2517 49 B u f fa l o g r a s s Native Grasses A 5-8 inch short, sod-forming grass. Lives on as little as 12 inches of water per year, spreading by seed and surface runners. Buffalograss has no natural diseases or pests, does not respond to fertilizer, and withstands extreme heat or cold. Found from Minnesota and Montana down to Mexico, thriving in all types of soils. The environmentally responsible alternative to Bermuda or St. Augustine. Also see Native Sun Turf or Thunder Turf p.30. all D-Paks cover 200 sq ft Full Sunlight Partial Dappled Height 5-8 inches Shade X w b l Caliche Clay Loam Suggested SEEDING RATES can be increased 3-4 times or more for fuller coverage sooner Sand Big Bluestem Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche Less All day Half day Sunlight than full sun full sun, filtered half day through 2 hours of sun leaves shade Item #2001 Sand > Item #2002 Soil Type Loam Clay > > D-Pak $9 Full X 1-9 lbs $19.99 / lb Black Grama Sunlight Partial Dappled 10-49 lbs $19.84 / lb Dry-Moist Item #2012 50+ lbs $19.69 / lb Item #2026 photo by Paul Cox, Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center Item #2008 50 > > 1-9 lbs $13.00 / lb X w 10-49 lbs $12.85 / lb Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 10-49 lbs $13.57 / lb Soil Moisture Shade Dry-Moist 50+ lbs $13.44 / lb Andropogon glomeratus D-Pak $9 Bothriochloa barbinodis Seeding rate 3 lbs / acre Available in mixes & d-paks only Sunlight Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled > > > > X C u r ly M e s q u i t e Bouteloua gracilis Soil Moisture Shade Medium Moist D-Pak $9 Hilaria belangeri Highly drought tolerant native can grow on as little as 5 in. of rainfall a year. Found from central Texas to Old Mexico and Arizona. Forms stolens and runners, excellent for dry soils that are difficult to vegetate. Best in full sun. A great source of forage for wildlife and livestock. Can be used in combination with other short-grass natives such as Buffalograss and Blue Grama for a fantastic low-maintenance turf grass in arid areas of the southwest US and northern Mexico. Seeding rate 2 lbs / acre Height 3-6 inches 2 lbs per 1000 sq ft for lawn Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > 1-9 lbs $13.72 / lb Height 1-3 feet Soil Type Blue Grama is a 3-6 inch short grass that requires just 7 inches of water per year. If left unmowed during the flowering period, the grass produces a beautiful 10-inch seed stem. Excellent stands can readily be established from seed. Used as a water-conserving grass because of its wide adaptation to all soil types, including thin or alkaline soils. Excellent lawn grass in sunny areas when combined with Buffalograss (see p.30 Native Sun Turf) or Curly Mesquite (see p.30 Thunder Turf). Seeding rate 10 lbs / acre > D-Pak $9 > Sunlight Partial Dappled This hardy perennial grass can tolerate the worst of growing conditions. Especially well suited to erosion control plantings in the most challenging places. One of the few grasses that thrive in rocky and dry or depleted soils. Makes for great planting in recently cleared cedar breaks, where many other grasses will not grow. We got our genetic start from transplanting roots out of a caliche parking lot in downtown Junction. Seeding rate 3 lbs / acre Height 6 inches / seedheads 1-2 feet Available in mixes & d-paks only Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > > > X Dry-Medium D-Pak $9 Blue Grama D-Pak $9 > Cane Bluestem Bouteloua eriopoda This native grass is found throughout the arid and semi-arid areas of West Texas and into California. Extremely tolerant of drought conditions in challenging soil types and thrives on as little as 7 inches of rainfall per year. Typically growing up to 6" tall, this important western grass species historically served as a primary source of forage and cover for wildlife over an extensive range. Item #2047 > Full X Height 2-4 feet Available in mixes & d-paks only Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > > > > X w Medium-Moist Soil Moisture Shade > Seeding rate 24 lbs / acre 3-4 lbs per 1000 sq ft for lawn Found throughout southern US from Florida to California, up thru eastern seaboard and midwest. Seen mostly in moist low lying areas in western regions, can tolerate a wide variety soil types as long as the soil is moist (we’ve seen it growing out of cracks in solid limestone when moisture is available). In the fall, turns a brilliant copper color, so is often used for ornamental plantings. Excellent food source for a wide variety of native birds and wildlife. Seeding rate 2 lbs / acre A must for any water’s edge. Seeding rate 8 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 5400 sq ft Caliche > Bushy Bluestem Andropogon gerardii This 2-4 foot tall grass puts out a “turkey-foot” shaped seedhead to add an extra 2 feet to its height in the fall. The resulting 6-foot plant lives up to its reputation as “king of the prairie”. Big Bluestem thrives in deep soils 150 miles east and west of I-35 from the Gulf of Mexico to Canada. Forms a circular clump and sends roots down as deep as 12 feet into the soil. Like an ancient sequoia tree, 30' diameter colonies have been seen. Height 3-6 feet w/seedhead GRASSES Buchloe dactyloides Dry-Medium 50+ lbs $12.70 / lb Item # 2045 Height 4-10 inches Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > > Available in mixes & d-paks only Full X Order Online • www.seedsource.com Sunlight Partial Dappled Soil Moisture Shade Dry-Medium D-Pak $9 51 Eastern Gamagrass G r e e n S p r a n g l e to p Tripsacum dactyloides Most productive, nutritious forage grass on the planet. Grows in dense clumps and can be used as a buffer or screen. Seed must be exposed to cold, moist conditions before sprouting in the spring. An ancestor of corn, with intriguing pollination and seed-bearing parts that break at the joints when mature. Good larval food source for butterflies, provides cover and food for turkeys and other game birds. Cattle nearly grazed this highly palatable forage grass to extinction. Now you can help bring it back again. Seeding rate 12 lbs / acre Height 3-4 feet Item #2011 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > D-Pak $9 Caliche 1-9 lbs $19.13 / lb Sunlight Partial Dappled w 10-49 lbs $18.93 / lb Soil Moisture Shade Leptochloa dubia The spreading, “sprangled” appearance of the seedhead gives this grass its common name. Mix with other natives as a “nurse grass” - comes up quickly in the spring and is easy to grow, but fades after 2-3 years as other native grasses get established. Reproduces by seeds and roots. Performs as short-term nurse grass in a variety of soils and grows permanently on rocky hills and canyons in sandy soils of the Trans-Pecos area of Texas. 1 lb covers up to 3600 sq ft Full X GRASSES Medium-Moist 50+ lbs $18.73 / lb Item #2010 Seeding rate 2 lbs / acre Height 1-2 feet 1 lb covers up to 21,700 sq ft Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > > > > X Medium D-Pak $9 1-9 lbs $13.25 / lb 10-49 lbs $13.00 / lb 50+ lbs $12.75 / lb Eastern Gamagrass, Caddo Indiangrass Tripsacum dactyloides This semi-conservancy harvest was collected from the largest, southern most remaining unplowed colony, locally known as the "mill creek bottom". The genetic heritage of this eco-type has provided for numerous generations of anglo american families whom continue to manage this natural resource as a sustainable hay meadow since the late 1800's. Excellent for plantings in eastern Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana and points to Atlantic seaboard. Lower elevations and higher rainfall typically found across the Caddoan homelands. Seeding rate 12 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 3600 sq ft Height 3-4 feet Item #2051 Sand > Soil Type Loam Clay > > Caliche Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w Soil Moisture Shade Medium-Moist D-Pak $9 $24 / lb Item #2006 F e at h e r g r a s s Item #2044 52 Chasmanthium latifolium Shade-loving cool season, almost evergreen perennial grass with wide leaves. Excellent ornamental grass with distinct and attractive chevron seedheads. Often found thriving along creeks and riverbanks in woodland areas, salt tolerant. Highly palatable to livestock, but can be easily grazed out. One of the few native grasses that grow well in moist and shady areas. Seeding rate 10 lbs / acre Height 18-36 inches 1 lb covers up to 4300 sq ft Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > > > X Dry-Medium D-Pak $9 $35 / lb Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 Seeding rate 6 lbs / acre Height 3-4 feet 1 lb covers up to 7200 sq ft Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > > > > X Dry-Moist D-Pak $9 1-9 lbs $15.58 / lb 10-49 lbs $15.43 / lb 50+ lbs $15.29 / lb I nl a n d S e a O at s Pleuraphis jamesii Found from Texas and Oklahoma westward toward California, this tough and drought resistant perennial warm season grass is typically found in heavy clay or loam soils, sometimes alone or in mixed stands with Black Grama. Overgrazing has taken much of this highly palatable grass throughout its native range. An excellent choice for erosion control or creating more diverse and sustainable grasses in dry, western rangeland ecosystems. Item #2049 Sorghastrum nutans All of the above plus more. This selection was made by the late R.C. Mauldin, an elder and mentor to many people of rangeland, soil & water conservation work in the early to mid 1900s. We got a start of this genetic stock by conducting a plant rescue on his old homeplace just before bulldozers leveled his farm to make way for a new subdivision of desert tan rooftops. This grass has performed excellently in the Blacklands & Edwards Plateau. Height 3-4 feet Available in d-paks only Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > > > > X w b l Medium Moist D-Pak $9 G a ll e ta Seeding rate 6 lbs / acre Height 3-4 feet 1 lb covers up to 7200 sq ft Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > > > > X Dry-Moist D-Pak $9 1-9 lbs $14.58 / lb 10-49 lbs $14.43 / lb 50+ lbs $14.29 / lb Waco Indiangrass Hesperostipa neomexicana Great ornamental cool season grass that grows in compact clumps up to 3 or 4 feet tall. Is an extremely tough plant that holds up well in drought situations and in poor soils. Aside from its beauty it is also an excellent for establishing vegetation to control erosion. Common through the western Edwards Plateau and west to New Mexico and Arizona. Fantastic accent plant for any garden. Item #2041 Sorghastrum nutans Once a dominant prairie grass, Indiangrass puts out dramatic golden plume-like seedheads on 2-foot stalks from September to November. Endures extreme drought and grows best in sand, loam and clay soils of bottomlands and the lower slopes of hills, in many regions from Canada to Mexico. Larval food source for butterflies, food & cover for turkeys. Excellent for grazing. Height 1-3 feet Item #2013 Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > Seeding rate 12 lbs / acre Available in mixes & d-paks only Full Order Online • www.seedsource.com Sunlight Partial Dappled b Soil Moisture Shade l Medium Moist D-Pak $9 53 Schizachyrium scoparium At home on the range or in your yard, this beautiful blue-green bunch grass turns red-bronze after frost with fluffy, silver-white seeds. Reaches 2-3 ft at maturity with the seedhead adding another 1-2 ft in height. Grows in oak savannahs & prairies, the Edwards Plateau & Rolling Plans, and in the coastal prairie regions Provides excellent nesting cover for birds, and larval food source for butterflies. Item #2003 Seeding rate 8 lbs / acre Height 2-3 feet 1 lb covers up to 5400 sq ft Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > > > > X w Dry-Moist D-Pak $9 1-9 lbs $15.25 / lb 10-49 lbs $15.00 / lb 50+ lbs $14.75 / lb Plains Bristlegrass P u r pl e to p Sand > Item #2043 Sunlight Partial Dappled w b P r a i r i e W i l d ry e Sand Dropseed Item #2014 > D-Pak $9 > > > 1-9 lbs $15.95 / lb P u r pl e T h r e e -A w n w b 10-49 lbs $14.95 / lb Dry-Moist Item # 2024 50+ lbs $13.95 / lb D-Pak $9 Item #2015 54 Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 Sunlight Partial Dappled D-Pak $9 w b Soil Moisture Shade l Dry-Medium Seeding rate 1 lb / acre / 43,560 sq ft Sunlight Partial Dappled Full X 1-9 lbs $14.95 / lb 10-49 lbs $13.95 / lb Soil Moisture Shade Dry-Moist 50+ lbs $12.95 / lb Eragrostis trichodes Height 1-2 feet Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche Soil Moisture Shade Sunlight Partial Dappled Full X This bunchgrass produces a deep, dense root system. Grows best on sandy soils in the 1835” rain belt, but can be planted on heavier soils. Begins its growth several weeks before other warm-season grasses, and is therefore an important food source for grazing animals. Seedheads are loose and open, standing 2 feet above the grass in early fall. Reproduces by seeds and roots, prefers full sun. Seeding rate 4 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 10,800 sq ft Full X Available in d-paks only Sporobolus cryptandrus Sand Lovegrass Aristida purpurea A short native grass with attractive purple-tinted awns that can be seen after periods of rainfall during the growing season. Awns, delicate and hair-like, are found on many grass species, but not usually so over-the-top as in this grass. Once the seeds of Purple Three-Awn are placed in a bag, they become one-pound tangles. Pull ‘em apart when you’re ready to plant, and broadcast into wild drifts. Also featured in our Midway Mix, p. 21 Height 10-20 inches Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > > > Aristida purpurea var. longiseta Height 1-4 feet Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > > > Soil Moisture Shade l $43.00 / lb A perennial warm-season grass that grows in relatively small tufts or bunches, Sand Dropseed reproduces from small seeds and tillers. Seedheads appear around September. Commonly found on sandy, rocky and silty soils areas of the southern Great Plains across Texas and New Mexico and up through Oklahoma, Kansas and Colorado. Moves in quickly on undisturbed areas. Nutritious grains have been used as food by Native Americans. Seeding rate 10 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 4300 sq ft Full X Medium Moist D-Pak $9 Elymus canadensis Sunlight Partial Dappled b Item #2055 $26 / lb Grows abundantly on moist open prairie sites, but is also found in shaded areas. This cool season grass begins its growth in the fall and grows slowly through the winter, maturing in late spring to early summer. Mixes with many warm-season native grasses. Seedlings are vigorous and produce ground cover rapidly. Larval food source for butterflies, and the grain from seed is an important food for wildlife. Height 2-4 feet w/seedhead Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche w Soil Moisture Shade l D-Pak $9 Height 6-20 inches Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > > > Dry-Moist D-Pak $9 Sunlight Partial Dappled Full X A native cool-season perennial grass. This grass establishes easily under adverse conditions and protects soil against erosion until later climax species of grasses take over. Red ThreeAwn growth starts in early spring from seed. This threeawn is a good seed producer. The seedlings are vigorous. It grows readily on areas, such as old abandoned fields, oil-well locations, road cuts and cattle round-up grounds. Beautiful red colored awns! Soil Moisture Shade Caliche > R e d T h r e e -A w n Setaria macrostachya Full X Soil Type Loam Clay > > Item #2048 Seeding rate 6 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 7200 sq ft Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > > > Seeding rate 11 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 4000 sq ft Height 2-5 feet A hardy perennial native bunch grass found from S. Texas and Mexico to Arizona and Colorado. Excellent food source for wildlife and livestock, and grows easily in even the toughest conditions. Good drought tolerance, and a high-quality grass for southern and western prairie restoration, or for revegetating disturbed areas around stock tanks, roadsides, and newly cleared land. Height 2-3 feet Tridens flavus A smooth, glossy green grass with characteristic purple seed heads found in the eastern regions of the country. Does best in acidic soil that is poor in nutrients and is well drained. Good for erosion control and revegetation in disturbed areas, with a native range from Texas to Nebraska, all the way to the eastern seaboard. A highly sought-after forage grass and once established, forms dense coverage that helps keep weeds and brush at bay. Photo by Ted Bodner / USDA-NRCS Plants Database Little Bluestem GRASSES Dry-Medium Item #2009 $59.95 / lb > > D-Pak $9 > > 1-9 lbs $16.67 / lb Seeding rate 2 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 21,700 sq ft Sunlight Partial Dappled Full X 10-49 lbs $16.49 / lb Order Online • www.seedsource.com Soil Moisture Shade Dry-Moist 50+ lbs $16.33 / lb 55 S i d e o at s G r a m a Texas Wintergrass Bouteloua curtipendula The official “State Grass of Texas,” this mid-sized plant is often found as an ornamental accent in residential and commercial landscapes, thanks to the pretty, oat-like seeds that appear along one side of its stems. Spreads by seeds and roots, and thrives alongside Little Bluestem in natural grasslands, well drained uplands, and the shallow soils of ridges and rocky areas. Found from Kentucky to the Gulf of Mexico. Turkeys use this versatile grass for food & cover, and it is a good larval food source for butterflies. Item #2004 One tough grass seed to harvest and clean. Grains are big and heavy like wheat, but with a twisted, 3-inch-long awn and a barb at one end. As youngsters we knew this as speargrass. Found all across Texas in better bottomland soils and mesquite flats. Lush green growth during cool season, silky purple blooms early in spring, and dry wispy stems after the seeds have fallen in late spring. Extremely drought tolerant and actually evergreen. We mowed our patch only twice during the last dry year and never watered. Seeding rate 7 lbs / acre Height 2-3 feet 1 lb covers up to 6200 sf Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > > > > X w Dry-Medium D-Pak $9 1-9 lbs $17.71 / lb 10-49 lbs $17.53 / lb 50+ lbs $17.35 / lb Switchgrass Item #2028 D-Pak $9 1-9 lbs $14.32 / lb w 10-49 lbs $14.18 / lb U pl a n d S w i t c h g r a s s Soil Moisture Shade Medium Moist 50+ lbs $13.99 / lb Item #2034 D-Pak $9 1-9 lbs $17.32 / lb photo by Greg Lavitey Texas Cupgrass Seeding rate 4 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 10,800 sq ft Full X Sunlight Partial Dappled w 10-49 lbs $16.88 / lb Soil Moisture Shade Moist 50+ lbs $15.99 / lb Item #2050 Item #2029 56 Soil Moisture Shade > > > > w Medium-Moist D-Pak $9 Native American Seed • 800 728 4043 Pascopyrum smithii Height 1-3 feet Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > > > Full X 1 lb covers up to 4800 sq ft Sunlight Soil Moisture Partial Dappled Shade w b Dry-Moist D-Pak $9 $15 / lb Tridens albescens A new species in production on the farm, we are proud to offer this attractive native bunch grass. White seed-heads are productive and add diversity to native landscaping & restoration projects. Good forage, nesting material and nutritious seeds for wildlife. Fibrous root systems hold soil very effectively. This grass grows best along drainageways and sites that overflow occasionally. Also in Dam Slope Mix (p. 26). Seeding rate 8 lbs / acre Available in mixes & d-paks Sunlight Partial Dappled Seeding rate 10 lbs / acre Height 2-3 feet 1 lb covers up to 4300 sq ft Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > > > > X w b l Medium-Moist D-Pak $9 1-9 lbs $21 / lb 10-49 lbs $20 / lb 50+ lbs $19 / lb White Tridens Good native prairie indicator, though mostly grazed to extinction. Many bird species, such as painted buntings and meadowlarks love the nutritional seeds. Great forage plant for livestock and recovers quickly following rotational grazing. Blooms and produces seeds several times throughout the growing season and will readily increase with good land management. Limited quantities. Full X Elymus virginicus A high quality native cool season pasture grass found in the western regions of the US & northern Mexico. Excellent grass for erosion control with a dense, fibrous root system and can tolerate salty soil conditions making it a great choice for revegetating areas with challenging soils. In its native range from the great plains through the west, western wheatgrass typically grows from 1 to 3 feet tall with as little as 12 inches of rainfall. Highly palatable to both wildlife and livestock, providing cool season forage. Caution: May choke out Seeding rate 9 lbs / acre cool season wildflowers if overwatered or in a moist location. Eriochloa sericea Height 1-2 feet only Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche Seeding rate 15 lbs / acre Available in mixes & d-paks only Sunlight Soil Moisture Partial Dappled Shade w b l Medium-Moist D-Pak $9 W e s t e r n W h e at g r a s s Panicum virgatum In cooperation with the Texas Nature Conservancy we are producing Upland Switchgrass that was originally collected from the TNC Clymer Meadow in the blacklands of North Central Texas. This Switchgrass is shorter, more compact, and not nearly as aggressive as other Switchgrasses. Attracts dove, quail, turkey and many songbirds with its abundant seeds. Valued as high-quality grazing forage. Height 2-3 feet Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > > > Item #2035 Robert H. Mohlenbrock, USDA SDS Item #2005 Full X Found in the eastern 2/3 of the United States, this perennial cool season bunch grass is typically found along shady creek banks, fence rows or in open woodlands. One of a very few native grasses that is a solid performer in shady areas. A great choice for mixing with warm season native grasses to provide a source of winter forage and nutrient-rich grain for wildlife. As do most cool season grasses, Virginia Wildrye begins growth in the fall and grows slowly through the winter, maturing in late spring. Seeding rate 4 lbs / acre 1 lb covers up to 10,800 sq ft Sunlight Partial Dappled Height 1-2 feet Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full > > > > X V i r g i n i a W i l d ry e Panicum virgatum A tall fast-growing grass that serves as wildlife cover in winter. Extensive root systems provide excellent erosion control around creek banks and ponds. Attractive open seedheads turn golden yellow in the fall. Dove, quail and turkey use as food and cover, as do many song birds. Larval food source for butterflies. Height 3-4 feet Soil Type Sand Loam Clay Caliche > > > > GRASSES Nasella leucotricha Item #3159 Height 1-3 feet Seeding rate 0.5 lbs / acre Available in mixes & d-paks Soil Type Sunlight Soil Moisture Sand Loam Clay Caliche Full Partial Dappled Shade > > > X w Medium-Moist D-pak $9 Order Online • www.seedsource.com 57 mail We’ve done the research so you don’t have to - a selection of the best field guides and resources we’ve found for Texas and bordering regions... #9999 1 Case Past Catalogs FREE (approx. 100) for artists & educators. Great field guide, color photos. #6015 100 Texas Wildflowers $10 A real bargain with color photos, good cross reference to each plant's eco-region in Tx. #6041 Brush and Weeds of Texas Rangelands $25 #6027 Building Within Nature $25 #6051 Conducting Prescribed Fires $28 Edible Wild Plants the Prairie $15 Native American Seed Dorothy Baird Mattiza Hart, Rector, Hanselka, Lyons, McGinty Andy & Sally Wasowski John R. Weir #6017 of Kelly Kindscher #6037 Flora #6030 Flora of North Central Texas of East Texas Diggs, Lipscomb, Reed, O'Kennon $90 $90 Diggs, Lipscomb, O'Kennon Gardening Plants with Prairie $30 Sally & Andy Wasowski Grasses #6038 Grasses of the Texas Hill Country $23 Hill Country Landowners Guide $20 #6034 Know Your Grasses $15 #6014 Medicinal Wild Plants of the Prairie $15 Native Plants Landscaping $19 of Texas Frank W. Gould $43 Brian & Shirley Loflin #6050 Jim Stanley Barron Rector Kelly Kindscher #6039 in Powell & Powell Walking from Kansas to Colorado with an elder, Kelly learned to find, harvest and prepare native wild food plants. 340 pp, softcover 1600 species with great descriptions & illustrations for plant ID from I-35 east Tx border. 1594 pp, hardcover Most comprehensive guide to ID native plants, covering large portions of Tx & Ok. Line drawings & color plates. 1626 pp, hardcover Ready to make the switch to native, naturally beautiful, low maintenance? Homeowners & commercial landscapers. 285 pp, softcover 523 grass species. This ref book serves ranchers, land managers & naturalists. Ecoregion maps show distribution. 633 pp, softcover Explore the incredible variety of native grasses that help hold the Hill Country together! 195 pp, softcover How to encourage growth of native grasses, songbirds and other wildlife, health of trees and conservation of water. 176 pp, softcover 80 grasses with line drawings, spiral bound, a basic primer and field guide. Historical medicinal uses of 203 native prairie plants and how they were applied by the Native Americans. 276 pp, softcover Dedicated to the remarkably hardy and native species of the Trans-Pecos region of Texas. 204 pp, softcover #6023 Native Texas Gardens $25 75 of the best native landscapes across Texas, residential & commercial. 185 pp, hardcover #6004 Native Texas Plants $39 Landscaping Region by Region. New 2nd Edition. 407 pp, softcover #6035 Northern Chihuahuan Desert Wildflowers $25 Pasture Plants $33 Sally and Andy Wazowski Sally and Andy Wazowski Steve West #6008 and Range Phillips Petroleum #6026 58 A step-by-step guide for anyone interested in the "nuts and bolts" of implementing a prescribed burn. 182 pp Range Management: Principals & Practices Holechek, Pieper, Herbel $129 Headed for Big Bend? Take this one along. Easy-to-use guide to flora of west TX and southern NM. 261 species with crisp color fotos, clear concise descriptions. m ethOd OF PaymeNt: Toll Free Order Line issue a refund? 800-728-4043 Native plants work for you! Alternative order seed choices. Street Address Exp. Date ❏ Check or tO money order enclosed ❏ Visa ❏by.) ShiP : (If different than ordered 800-728-3943 Toll Free Fax Line m ethOd OF PaymeNt : If anyThey itemrequire is temporarily of stock, should we: no extraout watering once established. CVC code❏on back No. www.seedsource.com ONliNe Native plants work forAccount you! Name ❏ Check or money order enclosed Visa ❏ of CC: Exp. Date They areanaturally disease and bug resistant. substitute similar seed? They require no extra watering once established. City/State/Zip CVC code on b Account No. Fertilizing is not 90 required. send the item, if able within days They are naturally disease and bug resistant. Cardholder’s Signature Alternative order seed choices. Street Address Grueling maintenance is unnecessary. Fertilizingwe: is not required. a refund? Ifissue any is temporarily of stock, Weitem guarantee you willout enjoy these should benefits. Cardholder’s Signature m ethOd OF PaymeNt : substitute a similar seed?Grueling maintenance is unnecessary. Daytime Phone City/State/Zip We guarantee benefits. Native plants work for you! you will enjoy these Exp. Date ❏ Check or money order enclosed ❏ Visa ❏ send the item, if able within 90 days Daytime Phone They require no extra watering once established. CVC code on back of CC: Account No. issue a refund? They are naturally disease and bug resistant. (for our use only; important if we have questions about your order) E-mail address m ethOd OF PaymeNt: Fertilizing is not required. Cardholder’s Native plantsiswork for you! Exp. Date ❏ CheckSignature or money order enclosed Visa ❏ only; important Grueling maintenance unnecessary. (for our use if we have questions about you E-mail address❏ They require no extra watering once established. We guarantee you will enjoy these benefits. CVC code on back of CC: Account No. They are naturally disease and bug resistant. Color photos, an individual map of Texas Daytime Phone $35 #6040 Rare Plants of Texas shows each species distribution along with Fertilizing is notSinhurst required. Poole, Carr, Price, Cardholder’s Signature extensive descriptions. 640 pp, hardcover Grueling maintenance is unnecessary. WE WILL SEND A FREE CATALOG TO YOUR FRIENDS ! Fully appreciate how Texas' native plants have Remarkable Plants $30 #6048 We guarantee you will enjoy of these benefits. sustained people and animals for prehistoric # Texas E-mail address (for our use only; important if we have questions about your order) Daytime Phone to SEND the present. 320 pp, CATALOG hardcover WE times WILL A FREE TO YOUR FRIENDS ! Matt Warnock Turner Name ____________________________________________________ Name ____________________________________________________ #6032 To help you decide how to build on your site in a way that best preserves natural landscape. Orderorder by seed choices. Alternative Street Address If any item is temporarily out of stock, should we: Alternative seed choices. Street Address m ail PhONe F800-728-4043 ax order O NliNe a similar Toll substitute Free Order LineIfseed? any item is temporarily out of stock,City/State/Zip should we: ShiP tO: (If different than ordered by.) Lineif able within 800-728-3943 Toll send Freethe Faxitem, 90 days substitute a similar seed? City/State/Zip ONliNe issue a refund? www.seedsource.com Name send the item, if able within 90 days Books & Resources #6029 Pictures and descriptions of the whole plant, close-ups of the stem, flower, fruit and leaf all make identification easy & fast. 203 pp, softcover Customer Code Junction, Texas 76849 USA from back cover of ail O Order StatiON Mmail rder Station rdered by : (Please correct if necessary.) yourO seed catalog. Toll Free Order Line 3791800-728-4043 N US Hwy 377 3791 N US Hwy 377 Key Code Customer Code Order ShiP tO : (If different than ordered by.) 800-728-3943 Toll FreebyFax Line Toll Free Please add codes O rder Line 800-728-4043 Junction, Texas 76849 USA Junction, TX 76849 O Name from back cover of ShiP tO: (If different than ordered by.) mNliNe ail PhONe www.seedsource.com Fax OLine NliNe 800-728-3943 Toll Free Fax your seed catalog. www.seedsource.com ONliNe Name Order Form Books / Resources more books (kids too!) www.seedsource.com O OFrder byStatiON Ordered by: (Please correct if necessary.) PhONe mail axrder ONliNe 3791 N US Hwy 377 Key Code m Pa hONe Fax ONliNe NailativeAmerican mericaN Seed Native Seed Please add codes Inspirational and humorous tales of transform$17 #6010 Requiem for a Street ____________________________________________________ Street ____________________________________________________ ing a conventional landscape into a low-mainName ___________________________________________ Name ____________________________________________________ Lawnmower tenance native paradise. 211 pp, softcover Sally & Andy Wasowski have ..................................$24 questions about your order) E-mail address (for our use only; important if we#6053 City ________________ State ______ Zip ______________________ City ________________ State ______ Zip ______________________ Street ___________________________________________ Street ____________________________________________________ T rees , Shrubs and Vines Start gardening the natural way! Here's how-to $35 #6033 Texas Gardening the from______________________ one of Texas' best experts. 382 City pp, hard________________ State ______ CityW________________ State ______ Zip Natural ay WE WILL SEND A FREE CATALOG TO YOUR FRIENDS ! of the Texas Hill Zip _____________ cover Name ____________________________________________________ Name ____________________________________________________ J. Howard Garret Country Jan Wrede Detailed line drawings help you identify 140 ange____________________________________________________ Plants $23 #6007 Texas R Street ____________________________________________________ Street Name ___________________________________________ Name Name ____________________________________________________ Name ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ species with grazing / wildlife values. 326 pp S.L. Hatch & J. Pluhar City ________________ State Zip City ________________ State ______ Zip ..................................$25 Street ___________________________________________ Street ____________________________________________________ Street ____________________________________________________ Street ____________________________________________________ Favorite of gardeners and aYOUR standard for ______ WE______________________ WILL SEND CATALOG TO FRIENDS !#6055______________________ $25 A FREE #6018 Texas Wildscapes determining how to create nature-friendly Kelly Conrad Bender O tero Mesa Preserving City ________________ State ______ Zip _____________ City ________________ State ______ Zip ______________________ City ________________ State ______ Zip ______________________ City ________________ State ______ Zip ______________________ home gardens. America's Wildest Name ____________________________________________________ Name ____________________________________________________ Lifetime endeavor to list every plant and its $135 #6024 Vol1 Useful Wild Plants Grassland uses in Texas, surrounding states and Mexico. Cheatham, Johnston & $135 NameStreet ____________________________________________________ NameStreet ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ #6031 Vol2 Amazing resource & extraordinary dedication. Marshall $140 Gregory McNames #6049 Vol3 Street ____________________________________________________ StreetCity ____________________________________________________ City ________________ State ______ Zip ______________________ ________________ State ______ Zip ______________________ Easy to use guide with over 900 color photos $35 #6028 Weeds of the West to help you identify weeds and natives. 628 Western Society Weed City ________________ State ______ Zip ______________________ City ________________ StateScience ______ ofZip ______________________ #6054 ..................................$25 pp, softcover Name ____________________________________________________ Name ____________________________________________________ R esilience Thinking 200 Species in color with interesting historical $22 #6016 Wildflowers of tales. 309 pp, softcover Street ____________________________________________________ Street ____________________________________________________ Brian Walker and David Salt Houston & SE Texas John & Gloria Tveten City ________________ State ______ Zip ______________________ City ________________ State ______ Zip ______________________ Color coded pages & handy size make this an $20 #6001 Wildflowers of Texas #6052 ..................................$30 ideal field guide for 482 of Texas native wildGeyata Ajilvsgi flowers. 524 pp, softcover Color illustrations. An easy to use guide to common prairie grasses & non-native species. 75 pp, hardcover #6002 For landowners, ranchers, wildlife biologists and range managers interested in natural resource management. 587 pp, hardcover #6006 Wildflowers of the Texas Hillcountry $18 Wildflowers of Western Plains $20 Color photos & detailed descriptions, ideal field guide. 524 pp, softcover Marshall Enquist the Zoe Merriman Kirkpatrick A native herself, she offers 186 species with color photos of hardy wildflowers. The plains of TX, NM, CO, KA. 240 pp, softcover Lone Star Wildflowers Nieland & Finley MORE PHOTOS & DESCRIPTIONS seedsource.com 59 Size Qty Description Price Each Total Price Native American Seed is donating $1,000 seed to restore 20 pocket prairies. u You choose the winners! Order over $89 for a chance to win free seed for a school or non-profit organization of your choice! Our summer intern, Weston, came up with this game. A great idea to have fun with some donations! Here's how it works... You place an order over $89 and are in the game. On December 21st, 2010 Native American Seed randomly draws 20 names from all orders over $89. Our staff will work with the twenty winners to get contact information for their favorite school or non-profit. Recipients receive fifty dollars of seed money with the slogan "In Native Seeds We Trust" packaged together with our current print catalog so that the lucky recipient can choose just exactly what they want to be shipped in time for spring planting. If you are faxIng your order, please repeat from other sIde: Merchandise Total thank you for your order! thIs Is the back of the order form. minimum order $15.00 Surface Shipping Subtotal Ordered by: 6.75% Sales Tax thank you for your order! ofco-Guest thIs Is the back E the order form.Lodging please repeat from other sIde: Item # TOTAL E-mail: If you are faxIng your order, Planting time: September - February Texas residents only. Shipping is taxable in Texas. Daytime Phone: # Cereal Rye Grain Cover Crop $8.75 Call us for ship rates over 20 lbs. 8050 8051 8052 8053 Merchandise Total minimum order $15.00 Surface Shipping $8.75 Call us for ship rates over 20 lbs. Subtotal Ordered by: 6.75% Sales Tax Daytime Phone: order by maIl•phone•fax•onlIne E-mail: Texas residents only. Shipping is taxable in Texas. TOTAL To show our appreciation, when you place an order with us, our goal is same day shipping. l e r v i Ca R Spend next weekend bi n Co o order by maIl•phone•fax•onlIne To show our appreciation, when you place an order with us, __________________________ PLACE the Llano River our goal is sameenjoying day shipping. STAMP __________________________ HERE 866.41.RIVER aE 866.417.4837 xperience the natives - wildlife viewing, birding, photography. Explore an evolving ecological atIve restoration merIcan eed forest, mesquite flats and of river hardwood rolling hills. Unplug from your everyday routine and aIl rder tatIon this private N ati v e A mericaenjoy n S eed 728 4043 • 800refuge. n __________________________ s m o s __________________________ 3791 N US Hwy 377 60 __________________________ PLACE STAMP HERE Cereal Rye Grain Planting Tips • To plant, first reduce weeds by scalping very short with mower • Broadcast grain on surface with seed slinger or use a bucket, just like feeding the chickens • Prepare the seedbed and plant in one pass by lightly tilling or discing to cover grain about 1" deep • If unable to till or disc, try raking grain into soil to achieve coverage • Wait for seasonal rains or supplement water to sprout • Mow down cover crop in late winter or early spring • Repeat bed preparation • Sow permanent native grass Description SQ. FT. AREA Total Lbs. Total Price Cereal Rye Grain Cover Crop............2,500 sq ft 12 lbs. Cereal Rye Grain Cover Crop............5,000 sq ft 25 lbs. Cereal Rye Grain Cover Crop...........10,000 sq ft 50 lbs. Cereal Rye Grain Cover Crop............One Acre 200 lbs. $026.40 $049.75 $069.50 $210.00 lb pkt dpak. etc SiteCROP Specific Mixes: Caliche, COVER / Cool river cabinShade-Friendly Item# Waiting for the right time to plant warm season native grass? Consider a cover crop of cereal rye grain this fall or winter. Rye grain is different than rye grass. Old-time farmers used to "cover crop" this land before chemical fertilizers came along. By planting economical, non-invasive crops to temporarily cover the land, he could feed his soil. Some old timers called it green manure. In the early spring, the green growing crop would be plowed right into the ground. It’s an efficient form of composting. We can practice the same healthy, organic principles today in our lawns with a garden tiller or digging fork. Cereal rye provides lush green cover through winter and builds organic matter in the soil. By planting a temporary cool season grain, this cover crop protects the land from eroding. Other benefits include an extensive underground network of fiberous roots which will eventually decay into soil. May require occasional 6" mowing in late Feb during wet years. If used as 'nurse crop' combined with native seedings - do not mow tops of wildflowers until after blooms fade and seed matures. N at i v e A m e ri ca n Order S e e d Online • www.seedsource.com • www.seedsource.com 61 61 61 Think... Issues to consider are sun, drainage, soils, planting time, weather, existing plants and dormant weed seeds, residual chemical, your tools and equipment, expectations and your budget. Take responsibility and care for the land. Use common sense. The natives are very friendly. Read the Land heavy metal plow, planter, packer or no-till drill eqpt or walk-behind tiller, whirlybird and roller Touch the earth and quietly listen. 150 years ago only native plants grew here. Though many changes have occurred, they would love to come back home. We encourage you to become native to your place. When choosing your site, read your land and how it lays. A compatible matching of seeds and planting sites is important. Most annual spring blooming wildflowers are cool season plants. They sprout and grow during the fall-winter. They bloom, go to seed and then die back in late spring-summer. Plant these types of wildflower seeds in early fall. August through November are the best dates, the earlier the better. The perennial wildflowers can be planted in spring or fall. Many perennials develop strong, deep tuberous roots the first year before producing blooms. Exotic cool season grasses and clovers are not compatible with wildflowers. Warm season native grass seeds germinate when soil temps are above 65º F. Regarding the best time to plant native grasses, it is true that late spring gives the best chances of success in normal rainfall years. However, successful plantings may be made up until 90 days before frost. The trade off is the daily passing of this year's growing season which translates into lighter top growth. Sprouting is triggered by soil temperature, moisture, and daylight hours. And of course there are always exceptions. If you need assistance, visit our website or please call us. Our staff is ready to help you. with or without special equipment, the basics of seeding remain... dispersal, light covering, then firmly press seed into the soil Mix fluffy or small seeds with a "carrier" for even distribution. Carriers such as coarse sand, perlite, rice hulls or other extenders aid in keeping seeds in suspension. This seed-carrier mix creates a "free flowing" characteristic as needed to broadcast the seed. Take half the seed mixture and spread it evenly over the whole area. Then cross back in opposite directions and spread the rest. Most seeds should never be buried more than twice their diameter. Do not bury small seeds at all! One of the most common reasons that seeds fail to come up is that they have been planted too deeply. Some seeds will be visible on the ground. Try using the sweeping motion of a treebranch or a leaf rake followed by a rollerpacker or the boots of a big foot. A diligent effort should be made to press the seeds into the soil. A firm seed-to-soil contact is very important. Bed Preparation If you have existing warm season grass, mow short, then remove thatch. Small sites can be hand raked or tilled no more than 1" deep to expose bare soil. Almost all soils contain dormant weed seeds, which will be awakened by excessive tilling. A "weedy" site may signal that special attention be required. Reduce invasive perennial weeds such as bermuda, KR bluestem, buffel, vasey and johnsongrass prior to planting native grass. Till and remove roots if possible. For small plots, consider using black plastic to solarize and kill weeds during hot summer months. For large areas, consider plowing with a tractor and various implements several times before seeding to expose, freeze or dry unwanted roots. If you choose chemical weed killers, get advice from your county extension agent. The least amount of soil disturbance will have the most favorable results, unless other objectives such as breaking hard clay sub-soils or incorporating organic matter and minerals are desired. When planting a native grass lawn, many people prefer to take special care. By starting with a weed-free, smoothly raked seedbed, the recommended lawn seeding rates are then applied. The lawn is kept weeded and watered until healthy native grass plants are established. Water Talk Nature allows seeds to lie dormant in the soil until rain falls. If you choose to irrigate, keep up with your watering until plants are established. For germination, water lightly and frequently to prevent top of soil from drying out. Rain gauges placed throughout the seeded areas can help you monitor daily waterings. When wildflower seedlings are about 1 inch tall or grass seedlings have 3 to 5 blades per sprout, reduce the frequency of waterings to 2 or 3 times weekly. Increase water per application to achieve greater soaking depths for development of healthy root systems. Alternate soil moisture from good deep soakings to moderately dry in between waterings. Roots need a balance of oxygen. Reduce frequency of waterings over time as plants become established. Supplemental water may be discontinued as seasonal rains return. Encourage and Enjoy The Act of Seeding Achieve good seed to soil contact. Spread seed by hand, like "feeding the chickens". A broadcast spreader or a seed drill is good for larger areas. Heavier seeding rates will work to your benefit. In comparing lost time maintaining weed control in a thin planting, the value of native seeds is very economical. 62 62 ati v eAA merica nSS eed • •800 800728 7284043 4043 NNative merican eed some seed on surface is ok Read the land • choose the spot • match seeds to the site • consider the competition • seasonal timing How to Grow Native Seeds How to Grow Native Seeds Prepare the site • walk lightly on the earth • mow close if needed • expose soil and rake up thatch or till no more than 1” deep • don’t stir up dormant weed seeds • exotic cool season grasses and clovers are not compatible The act of seeding • sow your seeds • seeds touch the earth • roll or pack Quick Seed Tips Water talk • let it rain • if not, learn to water properly Encourage and enjoy • encourage the natives • discourage the weeds • enjoy the experience! We walk softly helping the young budding plants by pulling out exotic grasses and broadleaf weeds. We effectively reduce these weeds year by year by limiting the seeds they make. Do not mow dying wildflowers too early! Seed production for next year should be encouraged. Most of the seeds must be allowed to mature, like... ‘on the vine’ before mowing. Nature’s plan goes on with us and without us. Be patient. Those who plant seeds, play an intimate role in the experience of life. Connecting the miracle of a seed to the forces of earth and sky...brings immeasurable joy to one’s heart. N at i v e Order A m e riOnline ca n S e•e d • www.seedsource.com 63 63 www.seedsource.com 63 R e s p o n s ib l e B e a u t y Native American Seed Mail Order Station 3791 N US Hwy 377 Junction, TX 76849 phone 800-728-4043 fax 800-728-3943 www.seedsource.com Key Code Customer Code PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID Ft Worth, TX PERMIT # 1016 ...helping people restore the earth shade-friendly wildflowers p. 23 A s pa c e n e a r y o u i s w o rt h y o f r e s t o r at i o n