Support EPA’s Proposal to Regulate PFAS in Drinking Water — DEADLINE EXTENDED TO MAY 15, 2023

Posted on |

PFAS contamination of drinking water is widespread in South Carolina, and poses health risks for millions of people. On March 29, 2023 EPA published a proposal that would establish the first national drinking water standards for six PFAS under the federal Safe Drinking Water Act.

As a follow-up to last month’s post on the subject, we encourage all our readers to sign on to the effort to curtail the quantity of PFAS in our water. Use this handy form to send an email showing your support.

A demonstration of widespread support for EPA’s proposal is crucial for its success. We anticipate industry will attempt to delay or weaken EPA’s drinking water standards.

These partners of the SCNPS invite you to join in support of EPA’s proposal:

Ta-Da! The Final Upstate Spring Sale Plant List (with map locations!)

Posted on |

The Plant List has been updated with map locations!

So: Get out your pencil and start strategizing! All plants have limited quantities (some more limited than others), so make sure to formulate your sale-day plan accordingly. (And, remember to bring your own wagon — we won’t have any to loan out this year.)

Cash, credit cards, and checks accepted. A 3% surcharge will apply for credit card orders to cover our processing fees. (Sorry! But, you know: non-profit, and all that!)

  • Full details about the sale and links to our FAQ pages can be found HERE.
  • Download a printable copy of the plant list in PDF form, HERE.
  • Download a copy of the plant list in Excel form, HERE.
  • Download the Sale Map, HERE.

 

RV Park or Rare Dwarf-Flowered Heartleaf? SCNPS Files Appeal

Posted on |

The SCNPS has retained the services of the Southern Environmental Law Center (SELC) to challenge the Spartanburg County Planning Commission’s conditional approval of an RV park on Goldmine Creek, a high-quality, ecologically sensitive Piedmont headwaters stream which, together with the surrounding forest, is home to a rare and threatened (in more ways than one) species, the Dwarf-Flowered Heartleaf. The appeal asks the Court of Common Pleas to reverse the Commission’s decision and to vacate the conditional approval of the site plan. Several homeowners associations and nearby landowners have also appealed the conditional approval of the site plan. The Circuit Court will decide both appeals.

The approved “park” (we use that word lightly) would include 86 parking spaces, 49 “campsites,” a stormwater detention pond, and (wait for it) a septic field. Despite the fact that the County’s own Unified Land Management Ordinance requires that RV park developments “protect ecologically sensitive areas” and “preserve natural features and landscape,” the developer’s site plan takes into account neither the presence of the rare plant nor the existence of ecologically sensitive areas, including important water resources and rich forest habitats. The kicker? The areas around this proposed RV park in Campobello are already protected by conservation easements. (Maybe it’s just us, but the phrase “No RV Park is an island” comes to mind.)

“This beautiful forest, clean stream, and very rare plant are important parts of Spartanburg County’s natural heritage,” said Frank Holleman, SELC senior attorney. “The County’s Ordinance requires that specific steps be taken to protect this important area, but the site plan approved by the Planning Commission would do real harm to this special place.”

In South Carolina, the Dwarf Flowered Heartleaf exists only in a limited band of the upper Piedmont in Spartanburg, Cherokee, and Greenville Counties in rich, damp forests. The South Carolina Department of Natural Resources considers it a “Highest Priority Species” in the South Carolina Wildlife Action Plan, and it has been listed as threatened under the federal Endangered Species Act since 1989. In Spartanburg County, the Department of Natural Resources established the Peters Creek Heritage Preserve to protect one of the areas where this plant is found.

“You can’t find this plant anywhere else in the world, and this development is not designed to protect this special plant and its habitat,” said Kathryn Ellis, president of South Carolina Native Plant Society. “We work to protect South Carolina’s natural heritage, including its important plants, and this site plan threatens these values that we all hold dear.”

The appeal filed yesterday asks the Court of Common Pleas to reverse the Planning Commission’s decision and to vacate the conditional approval of the site plan for the RV Park.

In addition to SELC’s appeal, homeowner associations and nearby landowners have also appealed the conditional approval of the site plan. The Circuit Court will decide both appeals.

The Upstate Spring Sale PLANT LIST Has Arrived!

Posted on |

The Plant List has Arrived!

  • Plants are organized by type, then alphabetically by Latinate name. You can search for keywords by pressing CMD-F (Mac) or CTRL-F (PC).
  • Members & Volunteers: We will be posting the pre-sale online order form on the evening of Friday, April 7. PLEASE DO NOT EMAIL ORDERS — WE WILL ONLY BE ACCEPTING ORDERS SENT VIA THE ONLINE PORTAL, which we will link to from this page on Friday!

So: Get out your pencil and drool over the list below to your heart’s content. All plants have limited quantities (some more than others), so make sure to formulate your sale-day plan accordingly. (And, remember to bring your own wagon — we won’t have any to loan out this year.)

Cash, credit cards, and checks accepted. A 3% surcharge will apply for credit card orders to cover our processing fees. (Sorry! But, you know: non-profit, and all that!)

Full details about the sale and links to our FAQ pages can be found HERE.
Download a printable copy of the plant list in PDF form, HERE.
Download a copy of the plant list in Excel form, HERE.

Once the Pre-Sale has concluded, we will update this list with locations keyed to the Conestee sale map.

 

Item Name $
FERNS
Asplenium platyneuron – Fern, Ebony spleenwort (1g) 12
Asplenium platyneuron – Fern, Ebony Spleenwort (4″) 6
Athyrium filix-femina -Fern, Lady (1g) 12
Dryopteris celsa – Fern, Log (1g) 12
Dryopteris marginalis – Fern, Marginal Wood (1g) 12
Matteuccia struthiopteris – Fern, Ostrich (1g) 12
Matteuccia struthiopteris – Fern, Ostrich (1.5g) 20
Onoclea sensibilis – Fern, Sensitive (1g) 12
Osmunda regalis – Fern, Royal (1g) 12
Osmundastrum cinnamomeum – Fern, Cinnamon (1g) 12
Polystichum acrostichoides – Fern, Christmas (1g) 12
Polystichum acrostichoides – Fern, Christmas (3g) 20
Sceptridium biternatum – Southern Grapefern (4”) 6
HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS
Achillea millefolium – Yarrow, white (1g) 9
Actaea racemosa – Black Cohosh (1g) 10
Agastache scrophulariifolia – Purple Giant Hyssop (1g) 9
Allium cernuum – Nodding Onion (4”) 4
Ampelaster carolinianus -Climbing Aster (1g) 10
Amsonia tabernaemontana v. salicifolia -Bluestar, Willowleaf (4Tall) 6
Amsonia tabernaemontana v. salicifolia -Bluestar, Willowleaf (1g) 9
Antennaria solitaria – Pussytoes (4”) 6
Antennaria solitaria – Pussytoes (1g) 10
Aquilegia canadensis – Columbine (4”) 6
Aquilegia canadensis – Columbine (1g) 9
Arisaema quinatum – Jack-in-the-Pulpit, Five-leaved (1g) 12
Aruncus dioicus – Goat’s Beard (1g) 12
Asclepias incarnata – Milkweed, Swamp (1g) 12
Asclepias tuberosa – Milkweed, Butterfly (4″) 4
Baptisia alba – White False Indigo (1g) 12
Baptisia australis – Blue False Indigo (1g) 12
Baptisia tinctoria – Yellow Wild Indigo (1g) 12
Bidens aristosa – Swamp Marigold (1g) 8
Cardamine dissecta – Forkleaf Toothwort (4”) 12
Chimaphila maculata – Spotted Pipsissewa (4”) 6
Chrysogonum virginianum – Green-and-gold (4″) 4
Claytonia virginica – Spring Beauty (1g) 10
Conoclinium coelestinum – Blue Mistflower (1g) 8
Coreopsis auriculata – Tickseed (1g) 8
Coreopsis grandiflora – Tickseed, Large Flower (1g) 9
Coreopsis lanceolata – Tickseed, Lanceleaf (1g) 9
Coreopsis palmata – Prairie Coreopsis (4″Tall) 6
Coreopsis tripteris – Tickseed, Tall (1g) 9
Echinacea purpurea – Coneflower, Purple (4″Tall) 6
Erigeron pulchellus – Robin’s Plantain (1g) 8
Eryngium yuccifolium – Rattlesnake Master (1g) 12
Erythronium umbilicatum – Trout Lily, Dimpled (1g) 9
Eupatorium rotundifolium – Thoroughwort,  Roundleaf (1g) 8
Eurybia divaricata – Aster, White Wood (1g) 10
Eutrochium fistulosum – Joe-Pye Weed (1g) 10
Geranium maculatum – Geranium, Spotted Wild (1g) 10
Helenium autumnale – Common Sneezeweed (1g) 8
Helianthus angustifolius – Sunflower, Swamp Narrowleaf (3.5Tall) 4
Helianthus atrorubens – Sunflower, Purpledisc (1g) 9
Helianthus giganteus – Sunflower, Tall (2g) 8
Helianthus glaucopyllus – Sunflower, White Leaf (1g) 8
Helianthus mollis – Sunflower, Ashy (1g) 8
Helianthus schweinitzii – Sunflower, Schweinitz’s (1g) 9
Heliopsis helianthoides – Sunflower, Oxeye (1g) 8
Hibiscus coccineus – Rose Mallow, Scarlet (1g) 10
Hibiscus moscheutos – Rose Mallow, Swamp (1g) 10
Hypoxis hirsuta – Yellow Star Grass (1g) 8
Iris cristata – Iris, Dwarf Crested (1g) 12
Iris virginica – Southern Blue Flag (1g) 12
Liatris microcephalus – Gayfeather, Dwarf (1.5 gal) 12
Liatris spicata – Gayfeather, Blazing Star (4″Tall) 6
Lilium michauxii – Lily, Carolina (2 years) (1g) 15
Lilium michauxii – Lily, Carolina (3 years) (1g) 18
Lilium michauxii – Lily, Carolina (4 years) (1g) 20
Lilium superbum – Lily, Turk’s Cap 15
Lobelia cardinalis – Cardinal Flower (1g) 8
Lobelia siphilitica – Lobelia, Great Blue (1g) 10
Lysimachia quadrifolia – Loosestrife, Whorled Yellow (1g) 9
Maianthemum racemosum – Solomon’s Plume (1g) 10
Manfreda virginica – American Aloe (1g) 10
Mitchella repens – Partridge Berry (1g) 10
Monarda didyma – Beebalm (4”) 5
Monarda didyma ‘Marshall’s Delight’ – Beebalm (4”) 6
Monarda didyma – Beebalm (1g) 10
Monarda fistulosa – Beebalm, Wild Bergamot (1g) 8
Monarda punctata – Beebalm, Spotted (1g) 8
Nymphaea odorata – American White Water-lily (1g) 20
Oenothera fruticosa – Sundrops (1g) 8
Packera aurea – Golden Ragwort (1g) 10
Parthenium integrifolium – Wild Quinine (1g) 10
Penstemon digitalis – Beardtongue, Foxglove (4”) 5
Penstemon digitalis – Beardtongue, Foxglove (1g) 10
Penstemon smallii – Beardtongue, Small’s (4″) 5
Phlox divaricata ‘Blue Moon’ – Phlox, Wild Blue – (1g) 12
Phlox stolonoifera – Phlox, Creeping (4”) 6
Phlox stolonoifera – Phlox, Creeping (1g) 10
Physostegia virginiana – Obedient Plant (1g) 9
Pityopsis graminifolia – Goldenaster, Silk Grass (4”) 5
Pityopsis graminifolia – Goldenaster, Silk Grass (1g) 9
Podophyllum peltatum – Mayapple (1g) 12
Pontederia cordata – Pickerelweed (1g) 9
Pycnanthemum muticum – Mountain Mint, Short Tooth (4Tall) 5
Pycnanthemum muticum – Mountain Mint, Short Tooth (1g) 8
Pycnanthemum pycnanthemoides – Mountain Mint, Southern (1g) 9
Pycnanthemum tenuifolium – Mountain Mint, Narrowleaf (4Tall) 5
Pycnanthemum tenuifolium – Mountain Mint, Narrowleaf (1g) 8
Pycnanthemum verticillatum v. pilosum – Mountain Mint, Whorled  (4”) 5
Pycnanthemum verticillatum v. pilosum – Mountain Mint, Whorled  (1g) 9
Ratibida pinnata – Coneflower, Gray-Headed (1g) 9
Rudbeckia fulgida – Coneflower, Orange (1g) 8
Rudbeckia heliopsidis – Coneflower, Sunfacing (1g) 9
Rudbeckia hirta – Coneflower, Black-eyed Susan (4”) 6
Rudbeckia hirta – Coneflower, Black-eyed Susan (1g) 8
Rudbeckia maxima – Coneflower, Giant (1g) 9
Rudbeckia triloba – Coneflower, Brown-eyed Susan (1g) 9
Ruellia caroliniensis – Carolina Petunia (1g) 8
Sagittarius latifolia – Broadleaf Arrowhead (3.5”) 12
Salvia coccinea – Scarlet Sage (4Tall) 6
Salvia lyrata – Lyreleaf Sage, Cancer Weed (1g) 8
Saururus cernuus – Lizard’s Tail (1g) 8
Sceptridium biternatum – Southern Grapefern (4”) 6
Silene subciliata – Smooth Scarlet Catchfly (1g) 10
Silphium terebinthinaceum – Prairie Dock (3g) 10
Sisyrinchium angustifolium – Blue-eyed Grass (1g) 9
Sisyrinchium angustifolium ‘Lucerne’ – Blue-eyed Grass 12
Solidago juncea – Goldenrod, Early (1g) 10
Solidago nemoralis – Goldenrod, Gray (3.5”) 5
Solidago nemoralis – Goldenrod, Gray (1g) 8
Solidago odora – Goldenrod, Sweet (4”) 6
Solidago rigida – Goldenrod, Stiff (1g) 10
Solidago rugosa  ‘Fireworks’ – Goldenrod, Wrinkle Leaf (1g) 10
Solidago shortii – Goldenrod, Short’s (1g) 10
Solidago speciosa – Goldenrod, Showy (1g) 10
Symphyotrichum cordifolium – Aster, Heart Leaf (1g) 9
Symphyotrichum drummondii – Aster, Drummond’s (3.5”) 4
Symphyotrichum elliottii – Aster, Elliott’s (1g) 8
Symphyotrichum ericoides – Aster, Frost (1g) 10
Symphyotrichum georgianum – Aster, Georgia (1g) 9
Symphyotrichum laeve – Smooth Aster (1g) 9
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum – Aster, Calico (1g) 10
Symphyotrichum novae-angliae – Aster, New England (1g) 8
Symphyotrichum oblongifolium ‘Raydon’s Favorite’ -Aster, Aromatic 4” 6
Tephrosia spicata – Spiked Hoarypea (1g) 8
Tipularia discolor – Crane-fly Orchid (4”) 6
Tradescantia ohioensis – Spiderwort (1g) 9
Trillium cuneatum – Trillium, Sweet Betsy (4″) 6
Trillium cuneatum – Trillium, Sweet Betsy (1g) 12
Vernonia noveboracensis – Ironweed, New York (1g) 12
Veronicastrum virginicum – Culver’s Root (1g) 9
Yucca filamentosa – Adam’s Needle (1g) 10
Zizea aurea – Golden Alexander (4″Tall) 6
Zizea aurea – Golden Alexander (1g) 10
SEDGES, RUSHES, & GRASSES
Andropogon gerardii – Grass, Big Bluestem (1g) 8
Andropogon glomeratus – Grass, Bushy Bluestem (4Tall) 5
Bouteloua curtipendula – Grass, Sideoats Grama (1g) 8
Carex amphibola – Sedge, Eastern Narrow Leaf (1g) 8
Carex appalachica – Sedge, Appalachian (4Tall) 5
Carex cherokeensis – Sedge, Cherokee (4”) 5
Carex cherokeensis – Sedge, Cherokee (1g) 8
Carex laxiculmis ‘Hobb’ – Sedge, Creeping ‘Hobb’ (1g) 8
Carex leavenworthii – Sedge, Leavenworth’s (1g) 8
Carex pensylvanica – Sedge, Pennsylvania (4Tall) 5
Carex radiata – Sedge, Eastern Star (4Tall) 5
Carex texensis – Sedge, Texas (1g) 8
Chasmanthium latifolium – Grass, Inland Sea Oats (1g) 8
Chasmanthium laxum – Grass, Slender Woodoats (1g) 8
Elymus hystrix – Grass, Eastern Bottlebrush (Plugs) 5
Erianthus alopecuroides – Grass, Silver plumegrass (1g) 8
Muhlenbergia capillaris – Grass, Pink Muhly  (4Tall) 5
Muhlenbergia capillaris – Grass, Pink Muhly (1g) 12
Muhlenbergia lindheimeri – Grass, Lindheimer’s (1g) 12
Muhlenbergia reverchonii – Grass, Rose  (4″Tall) 5
Panicum virgatum – Grass, Switchgrass (1g) 8
Rhynchospora colorata – Sedge, White-topped (1g) 9
Schizaachyrium scoparium – Little Bluestem (1gal) 9
Sorghastrum nutans – Grass, Yellow Indiangrass (1g) 8
Tripsacum dactyloides – Grass, Eastern Gama (1g) 8
SHRUBS
Aesculus pavia – Buckeye, Red (1g) 10
Aesculus sylvatica X – Buckeye – Painted (1g) 10
Aesculus sylvatica X – Buckeye – Painted (2g) 20
Amorpha fruticosa – False Indigo (Bush) (1g) 12
Aronia arbutifolia – Chokeberry, Red (3g) 30
Aronia melanocarpa – Chokeberry, Black (3g) 30
Callicarpa americana – Beautyberry, American (1g) 12
Callicarpa americana – Beautyberry, American (3g) 20
Calycanthus floridus – Sweetshrub (1g) 12
Calycanthus floridus – Sweetshrub (3g) 30
Cephalanthus occidentalis – Buttonbush (1g) 10
Cephalanthus occidentalis – Buttonbush (3g) 30
Chionanthus virginicus – Fringetree, White (1g) 10
Clethra alnifolia ‘16 Candles” – Summersweet “16 Candles” (1g) 12
Clethra alnifolia ‘16 Candles” – Summersweet “16 Candles” (2g) 15
Clethra alnifolia ‘Hummingbird’ – Summersweet (3g) 30
Cornus foemina – Dogwood, Swamp (2g) 12
Diervilla sessilifolia – Honeysuckle Bush (3g) 30
Euonymus americanus – Strawberry Bush, Hearts-a-Bustin’ (1g) 12
Euonymus americanus – Strawberry Bush, Hearts-a-Bustin’ (3g) 20
Fothergilla gardenii – Fothergilla, Dwarf (3g) 30
Fothergilla major v. ‘Mt. Airy’ – Fothergilla ‘Mt. Airy’ (3g) 30
Hydrangea arborescens – Hydrangea, Smooth (3g) 30
Hydrangea arborescens  ‘Annabelle’- Hydrangea, Smooth (3g) 30
Hydrangea quercifolia – Hydrangea, Oakleaf (3g) 30
Hydrangea radiata – Silverleaf Hydrangea (1) 10
Hypericum prolificum – St. John’s Wort, Shrubby (1g) 12
Ilex opaca – Holly, American (1g) 10
Ilex verticillata ‘Southern Gentlemen’ – Winterberry Holly (male) (3g) 30
Ilex verticillata ‘Winter Red’ – Winterberry Holly (female) (3g) 30
Ilex vomitoria – Holly, Yaupon Holly (1g) 10
Itea virginica – Sweetspire (1g) 12
Leucothoe axillaris – Coastal Leucothoe (1g) 18
Lindera benzoin – Spicebush (3g) 30
Rhododendron arborescens – Azalea, Sweet (1g) 15
Rhododendron arborescens – Azalea, Sweet (3g) 40
Rhododendron calendulaceum – Azalea, Flame (1g) 15
Rhododendron calendulaceum – Azalea, Flame (3g) 40
Rhododendron canescens – Azalea, Piedmont (1g) 15
Rhododendron canescens – Azalea, Piedmont (3g) 40
Rhododendron colemanii – Azalea, Red Hills (2g) 10
Rhododendron periclymenoides – Azalea, Pinxterbloom (1g) 15
Rhododendron periclymenoides – Azalea, Pinxterbloom (3g) 40
Rhus aromatica ‘Gro-low’ – Sumac, Fragrant (3g) 35
Rhus copallinum – Sumac, Winged (1g) 15
Rosa carolina – Carolina Rose (1g) 15
Sambucus canadensis – Elderberry (1g) 8
Sambucus canadensis – Elderberry (2g) 15
Spirea tomentosa – Hardhack (3g) 30
Swida amomum (syn.w/Cornus) – Dogwood, Silky (1g) 12
Swida amomum (syn.w/Cornus)- Dogwood, Silky (3g) 20
Vaccinium virgatum ‘Brightwell’- Rabbiteye Blueberry (1g) 15
Vaccinium virgatum ‘Krewer’ – Rabbiteye Blueberry (1g) 15
Vaccinium virgatum ‘Ochlockonee’ – Rabbiteye Blueberry (1g) 15
Viburnum dentatum – Viburnum, Arrowwood (2g) 20
Viburnum dentatum – Viburnum, Arrowwood (3g) 30
Viburnum prunifolium – Viburnum, Blackhaw (3g) 30
Viburnum rufidulum – Viburnum, Rusty Blackhaw (3g) 30
Xanthoriza simplicissima – Yellowroot (1g) 12
Xanthoriza simplicissima – Yellowroot (2g) 18
TREES
Acer leucoderme – Maple, Chalk (1g) 10
Aesculus flava – Yellow Buckeye (1g) 12
Amelanchier arborea – Serviceberry, Downy (1g) 12
Amelanchier laevis – Serviceberry (3g) 35
Asimina triloba – Pawpaw (2nd year from seed) (1g) 12
Betula nigra – River Birch (1g) 12
Cercis canadensis – Redbud, Eastern (1g) 10
Cercis canadensis – Redbud, Eastern (2g) 12
Cercis canadensis – Redbud, Eastern (3g) 15
Diospyrus virginiana – Persimmon, American (1g) 10
Juglans nigra – Black Walnut (1g) 12
Juniperus virginiana – Eastern Red Cedar (2g) 12
Liriodendron tulipifera – Tulip Poplar (1g) 10
Liriodendron tulipifera – Tulip Poplar (3g) 15
Magnolia tripetala – Magnolia, Umbrella (2g) 20
Oxydendron arboreum – Sourwood (1g) 12
Oxydendron arboreum – Sourwood (2g) 20
Oxydendron arboreum – Sourwood (3g) 30
Taxodium distichum – Bald Cypress (2g) 15
VINES
Aristolochia macrophylla – Dutchman’s Pipe (3 Tall) 10
Bignonia capreolata – Cross vine (1g) 10
Centrosema virginianum – Spurred Butterfly Pea (1g) 10
Gelsemium sempervirens – Carolina Jessamine (1g) 10
Hydrangea barbara – Hydrangea, Climbing (1g) 10
Lonicera sempervirens – Coral Honeysuckle (1g) 10
Passiflora lutea – Passion Flower, Yellow (1g) 10

Alien Invaders: Hedera helix (English Ivy)

Posted on |

by Special Contributor Matthew Thomas

Quick: What first comes to mind when I say “English Ivy”? 

For some folks it’s the Groves of Academe, like Harvard Yard or “The Quad” at Yale, storied ivy-covered walls brimming over with history, erudition, and romance. 

But if you’re like me (and I know you are), you envision an old-growth hardwood forest overrun, a neighbor’s lawn smothered, and too-many-to-name native species choked to death by the menacing, all-encompassing vine.

Invasive species: English IvyAmong my favorite gardening activities, I rank removing invasives as second-only to planting natives. Unfortunately, these days I have far more of the former than the latter to keep me busy. And English Ivy (Hedera helix) has become my personal favorite plant to hate. (Which, considering Kudzu and Thorny Olive — on which, more later— is saying quite a lot!)

Introduced to the Colonies around 1727, the “rapid-growing” and “low-maintenance” (read “aggressive”) English Ivy was advertised as the perfect ground cover. And, if by “perfect” one means, “smothers everything in its path,” the vine certainly knows few equals. 

Invasive species: English IvyThese days, it seems like it’s growing just about everywhere you look. I’ve seen it climbing solitary trees in the middle of fields, growing in the wild places where I explore and hike, and of course overtaking vacant properties, small and large alike. 

It’s a hardy plant, capable of surviving and thriving just about anywhere, from the mountains to the Sandhills to the Coastal Plains. It can not only withstand cold temperatures, it has even been known, if conditions are right, to continue to grow (albeit at a slower rate) during the coldest months, climbing bare and dormant deciduous trees, and killing them by Springtime.

As it establishes itself onto a woody plant, it traps moisture and inhibits the host’s ability to photosynthesize, causing a variety of issues including leaf spots, sooty mold, bacterial leaf spot, Anthracnose fungus, and root and stem rot. The beleaguered and weakened host plant is susceptible not only to death, but also to felling, due to the massive added weight of the vine itself.

Invasive species: English IvyIt’s not just on the ground or scaling trees where Hedera helix wreaks its havoc. As it wends its way over buildings and other structures, it traps moisture against walls and roofs, and works its tough roots into bricks and mortar, causing a myriad of structural problems as well as permanent damage to painted surfaces, stucco, and even vinyl.

We’ve all seen it: English Ivy, like its insidious cousin, Kudzu, can smother entire properties, creating a monoculture that covers, and sometimes destroys, every plant and structure in its path. 

All-in-all, it’s one very tough, insidious, and ubiquitous plant, and one that, once established, can be quite a challenge to eradicate.

Invasive species: English IvyWhile acknowledging that herbicides are a less-than-perfect solution, I’ve found that foliar spraying with Roundup when new growth emerges during the Spring months to be very effective. I follow up with smaller treatments to make sure I get any plants that were missed. Using this method, I can usually get rid of it completely in 2-3 growing seasons. 

That said, the incredibly knowledgeable folks at the South Carolina Native Plant Group Facebook group have generously shared with me some marvelous and ingenious suggestions for non-poisonous methods for dealing with the vine, including solarization, base cutting, smothering, and — if you happen to have one handy — a herd of goats! (I doff my cap to the group, and thank them for their generous responses!)

In the wild, I also pull up seedlings whenever I find them growing, and I cut and then paint vines that I find climbing trees. I’ve heard that foliar spraying on cold winter days can be effective but I’ve yet to try this method. I do recommend adding a surfactant to any herbicide when applying it to English Ivy.

Invasive species: English IvyThe pictures I’ve selected to illustrate this article show just how invasive the vine can be. In several you will see trees that have substantially weakened; in others you’ll see some that have been smothered to death. 

And, if you look closely, you will also notice another species on my most-wanted list, Elaeagnus pungens, aka Thorny Olive. (Keep an eye out for my next article featuring this insidious invasive!) Elaeagnus pungens is often found growing together with Hedura helix, along with several other well-known aggressive, invasive species. 

Given the destruction these two plants can (and do) cause, you would think that the SCDNR would have made selling them illegal in our state. But, sadly, both Hedura helix and Elaeagnus pungens are still legally grown and widely sold by local nurseries and big-box stores to this day.

To read more about these and other insidious species, refer to previous SCNPS articles on invasive groundcovers and their native alternatives and native groundcovers for shade gardens.

From the field,

Matthew Thomas

Special Contributor

The 2023 Upstate SCNPS Spring Sale Call for Volunteers

AND WE NEED VOLUNTEERS!

Here’s the skinny: The in-person plant sale is back, but with a hybrid twist. The General Sale (details below) will take place on Saturday, April 15, but MEMBERS & VOLUNTEERS will have the opportunity to purchase plants in advance (online-only), on Saturday and Sunday, April 8 & 9.

It takes a whole host of enthusiastic volunteers to put on a great plant sale. In the immortal words of longtime SCNPS member and mainstay Judy Seeley, “If everyone does a little, no one does too much!”

And, no worries: You don’t have to be an expert, just ready and willing to help. It takes a village to make magic. Read on for all the details!

UPDATE as of March 29th:

Some of the areas where we still need the most help are:

    • Equipment Transport (vehicles and people)
    • Day-of-Sale Set-Up
    • Traffic Direction/Management
    • Front Entrance Staffing
    • Checkout (Invoicers, Cashiers, Receipt Checkers)
    • Holding/Loading
    • Day-of-Sale Breakdown

VOLUNTEER SCHEDULE

Pre-Sale: Saturday, April 1, 10-1 – FILLED
Pre-Sale: Monday and Tuesday, April 10 & 11, 9-4
Sale Setup: Friday, April 14, 2023, 8 am – 4 pm – FILLED
Sale: Saturday, April 15, 8:00 am – 1 pm
Breakdown: Saturday, April 15, 1 pm – 4 pm

Pre-Sale Orders: Saturday-Sunday, April 8 & 9 (Members & Volunteers) (Online ONLY)
Pickup at the Upstate Native Nursery (UNN), 180 Lakewood Dr., Mauldin, SC 29667, by Wednesday, April 12 

General SaleSaturday, April 15, 2023
Conestee Park, 840 Mauldin Road, Greenville, SC 29607. Gates Open 9 O’Clock! Gates Close 1 pm!

Just a few of the areas of expertise (or willingness to learn) that we’re seeking include:

Publicity

  • Got an in at a local paper or online newsletter? How about an Upstate-oriented podcast or radio program? Or, willing to distribute flyers to local businesses all over the Upstate? We can use your help!

Volunteer Recruitment

  • Please help us spread the word that we need volunteers.  College students would be great helpers in the holding and loading areas!

Setup/Breakdown

  • Have you got a strong back? Or a pickup truck? Or, even better, both? We need you! There’s a lot of physical labor involved in throwing this party. Tables and barricades need to be pulled out of storage, transported to the sale site and set up (and the reverse once the sale is over). The plants have to be moved from the SCNPS greenhouse and gardens to Conestee, and back again. (Not that there will be a single one left, of course!)
  • Not really feeling the machismo? That’s okay, we need you, too! We’ll be marking chalk lines, laying out row markers, and setting up the cashier stations. And, during the sale, we’ll need folks staffing the holding and pickup areas, manning the cash registers, monitoring/directing the flow of traffic into and out of the sale, and helping to keep the arteries clear.
  • Can’t be there for the whole day? We also need volunteers to help take inventory of the plants, both before the sale and after.

And It Wouldn’t be a Party…

  • …without refreshments! Do you bake, cater, or know someone who does? We need to keep our volunteers fed, caffeinated, hydrated, and happy!

Have we Mentioned the PERK?

  • Volunteers and members get first crack at the plants, during the presale, Saturday & Sunday, April 8th and 9th (online only). There’s a limit on what you can buy (because otherwise, we’d get wiped out before we opened!), but if you’ve got your heart set on a few special somethings, sign up today and be first in line!
For details about all the positions we need filled, click HERE.
Or, to dive right in and tell us how you can help, click HERE!

As much as we love our furry friends, only identified service dogs will be allowed inside the sale area. There is a dog park next to the upper parking lot where supervised dogs can play!

 

 

Welcome South Carolina’s Newest State Park!

Black River. Credit: Edisto River Adventures

For the first time in almost 20 years, South Carolina has announced the creation of a new State Park. Named for the river which it will encompass, the Black River State Park has long been a dream of the SCNPS founder and past-president, Rick Huffman. (Many will recall the amazing presentation he gave last fall, “Black River State Park and Water Trails Master Plan.”

The Black River is 151 miles long, flowing through forests and swamps, its banks lined with ancient cypress and tupelo trees that clean the river while infusing its translucent waters with dark, organic tannins. And it is also rich with wildlife: On its banks, amphibians emerge from the inky waters to lay their eggs in damp hardwood forests, while the upland native longleaf pine forests are home to colonies of endangered red-cockaded woodpeckers and flatwoods salamanders.

The Black River Initiative is a community-inspired vision to establish a new recreational water trail connecting a growing network of public lands. The collaborative effort will, among much else, protect the wilderness areas of the river; provide equitable access; support the rural economy; and safeguard mature forests for wildlife, water quality, flood retention. 

To follow along as the park progresses, visit the Black River Initiative website, HERE.

2023 Upstate Spring Sale Volunteer Job Descriptions

Volunteer activities will take place at these locations:

  • Upstate Native Nursery (UNN) at 180 Lakewood Dr., Mauldin, SC 29667
  • SCNPS storage unit: Midgard Self Storage, 935 Butler Rd, Greenville, SC, 29607
  • Conestee Park, 840 Mauldin Road, Greenville (near baseball stadium; a 3-minute drive south of I-85 exit to Mauldin Rd)

Pre-Sale Team:

  • Pre-Sale Inventory: Take plant inventory at UNN. Day: Saturday, April 1, 10-1
  • Pre-Sale Orders: Pull pre-sale orders for members and volunteers at UNN. Days: Monday/Tuesday/Wednesday
  • Prep for General Sale: Label and prepare plants at UNN. Day: Thursday
  • Load and Transport: Load and unload plants and equipment in and out of trucks from the UNN Greenhouse and Storage Unit to Conestee Park. Need “strong” backs. Bring your truck, trailer, or SUV if you can. Day: Friday

Set-Up Team:

  • Friday Help with plant sale site layout at Conestee Park. Help unload and arrange plants. Water Plants. Check for price tags. Set up checkout and holding area, and place traffic barriers. Saturday set up tents, tables, and chairs, and put out signs.

Day-Of Team:

  • Vehicle Traffic Directors: Stationed in the upper parking lot to make sure cars don’t get in the way of customers lining up to enter the sale and that customers line up safely. Also stationed at the lower parking lot to make sure cars drive through in the right direction. Day: Saturday
  • Front Entrance Team: Work at Entrance Table and Line Management. Greet customers at entry, hand out plant lists and membership forms. Use a clicker to count customers entering the gate. Manage customer lines during sale and direct customers to holding, checkout, and exits. Answer questions and explain the holding and checkout process. Direct customers to plant experts and guest vendors. Training will be provided. Day: Saturday
  • Sales Team: The “orange vest” team provides education and advocacy to customers (and other volunteers) and helps customers locate and select plants. Day: Saturday
  • Holding / Loading Area Team: Place plants in numbered spaces and give customer matching token. Help pull price stakes in preparation for checkout. Load plants into customer vehicles. Some heavy lifting and lots of walking are involved. Day: Saturday
  • Invoicing Team: Work at Checkout table as an invoicer: Pull, sort, and count price stakes; fill out invoices; calculate subtotals. **Must be familiar with calculators, and comfortable with numbers and invoicing. Training provided. Day: Saturday
  • Cashier Team: Work at Checkout table as a cashier: Add subtotals for a grand total on customer tickets.  Receive payment from customers (cash, check, credit/debit cards). **Must be comfortable with calculators and using card readers and making change — retail experience helpful. Training will be provided. Day: Saturday
  • Hospitality Team/Volunteer Welcome Tables: Provide information and refreshments for volunteers. Set up water cooler for everyone and keep table neat and stocked. Day: Saturday
  • Snack Maker: Provide cookies and snacks for volunteers. Day: Saturday
  • Information and Book Table: Talk to customers. Provide information on SCNPS, as well as Upstate Chapter and Membership. Sell books and provide handouts. Get customers to sign up for future plant sale emails. Day: Saturday

Post-Sale Team:

  • Help take post-sale inventory. Help break down the sale and reload remaining plants and equipment for unloading at the Greenhouse and storage unit. Take down barriers and clean up the area. Day: Saturday
To dive right in and tell us how you can help, click HERE.
To get more general information about the sale, click HERE.
All volunteers must sign a Release and Waiver of Liability form prior to their shift(s).

Gardening for Life Celebration: Call for Volunteers

“You are Nature’s Best Hope!” — a talk by Doug Tallamy at GFLP

On March 4 from 1-5pm our friends at the Gardening For Life Project are sponsoring a “Gardening for Life Celebration,” featuring the renowned Doug Tallamy (entomologist, esteemed ecologist, and author of the NY Times bestselling book Nature’s Best Hope) as keynote speaker, to be held live and in-person at Polk County High School in Columbus, NC. In addition to the speech, the celebration will feature exhibitions, book signings, and more. Tickets for the keynote are free, but registration is required.

SCNPS will be exhibiting; volunteers are needed! Contact Judy Seeley to learn more.

 

Photo credit: Rob Cardilo

 

Plant of the Month: Hepatica, or Liverleaf

Hepatica americana (Photo Credit: Dan Whitten)

by Dan Whitten

I always like to introduce a plant by giving its name, location, and description, and then tell other stories like how it got its name or how it is useful.

The common names of two similar plants in SC are Sharp-lobed Hepatica (Hepatica acutiloba) and Round-lobed Hepatica (Hepatica americana). The name “Hepatica” can be interchanged with the name “Liverleaf” (not to be confused with “Liverwort,” which is a spore producing vascular plant). Liverleaf is a seed-producing, herbaceous plant of the forest floor.

The scientific names have been changed a couple of times in Weakley’s Flora of the Southeastern United States. On May 21, 2015, the genus for both species changed from Hepatica to Anemone. Then on October 20, 2020, it changed back to the genus Hepatica. Thankfully, it remained the same in the latest edition of April 24, 2022. Interestingly, though, the 2022 version of A Guide to the Wildflowers of South Carolina by McMillan, Porcher, Rayner, and White categorized it as the genus Anemone. (This book was featured in the September 2022 statewide SCNPS program and is a fantastic reference for flower enthusiasts.)

Of the two species of Hepatica occurring in South Carolina, the Sharp-lobed is the less common and occurs over calcareous or mafic rock, typically found in the mountainous part of the state. The Round-lobed is more common, with a wider geographic distribution. The differences between the two are in the tips of the lobes of the basal leaves, which are either sharp or rounded (hence the common names). In the bracts which are directly below the petaloid sepals, they are sharp tipped in the H. acutiloba and round tipped in the H. americana.  

Impress your (granted, thoroughly nerdy) friends by asking a trick question: How many petals does Hepatica have? Answer: none! They have instead 5-12 (typically around 7) petaloid sepals which are born on hairy pedicels and subtended by 3 bracts that mimic the sepals.

The petaloid sepals can be white, blue, lavender or purple. The basal leaves persist throughout the winter, and generally the new leaves come out well after the flowers in the spring. The flowers of the upstate reach peak bloom in March, but they can also be found at Stevens Creek Heritage Preserve as early as February and up near the Blue Ridge Parkway as late as April. At Station Cove Falls, I’ve seen a few plants flowering on the first day of the year, and once I saw a flower on Christmas Eve. So I challenge you to find a native and herbaceous wildflower that blooms any earlier in the year than Hepatica.

According to the Doctrine of Signatures, a plant was used to treat the part of the body that it resembled, and because the lobes of the brownish leaf of Hepatica in winter resembled the liver (aka the hepatic organ) in color and shape, it was used to treat everything from cowardice to freckles, including jaundice and other ailments believed to be of the liver.

George Hyams was collecting Hepatica in May of 1877 when he discovered the then long-lost plant that we now know as Oconee Bells, or Shortia galacifolia.