Native Florida Landscape Design Part 3 - Commercially-Available Natives with Karina Veaudry
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- Опубліковано 21 вер 2024
- This is the final segment of a three-part series with Karina Veaudry on Native Florida Landscape Design. In this segment Karina will go through some species of native plants that have high habitat value and are commercially available.
Karina Veaudry is a Landscape Architect and the President of the Pine Lily Chapter of the Florida Native Plant Society.
Thank you for having this available to everyone
You're welcome!
FANTASTIC video. Thank You from a new native plant entusiasist.
Such an informative video! Thank you!
Outstanding program on FL native plants. I have planted some in my garden and continue to add more this summer.
Thank you so much, Lorraine!
oh dang - type alert - THANK you
Very welcome!
Good video
With the rain lilies, I grow imine in clay azalea pots and using collected rainwater will trigger it to rebloom frequently. I assumed it was just the volume of water, but they may be sensitive to the treatment chemicals in hose water. Orchids respond poorly to hose water too, in my experiences.
Thank you for that great tip.
This was so informative and I loved all the plant details! Thanks so much for sharing on here. I just joined the Florida Native Plant Society and I'm looking forward to learning more! I specifically would like to know more about how to combine Florida native plants so that they look aesthetically pleasing.
We're so glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for becoming a member! We're working on another Lunch and Learn specifically focused on landscape design for the future.
@@floridanativeplantsociety Wonderful, thank you!
This was a great presentation! Would the PDF slides of the plants be available? I would love to have it for reference. Thank you.
This was very helpful, especially the native substitutes. Is there a recommended native substitute for Mexican petunia?
How can I get a copy of the PDF?
Hi. where can I buy those native,plants in south florida? Does anyone knows a nursery? Thanks.
There are many native plant nurseries in South Florida, search the fann.org website to find one near you with the plants you are interested in.