Serviceberry
Amelanchier canadensis
Built for the wet center of a rain garden and the boom-and-bust of storm runoff, for clay and loam ground, where it flowers in Apr and May.
- Full–part sun
- Average–wet
- 15–25 ft
- Blooms Apr–May
Moisture-loving natives for rain gardens, pond edges, downspout basins, and the low spots that stay soggy after a storm. Oklahoma sits in a landscape of Cross Timbers & mixedgrass prairie, and the natives that thrive here are the ones built for its continental, hot summers character. The list below — led by Serviceberry and Golden Alexanders — is filtered to species genuinely native to Oklahoma and the wider flora of the Great Plains and hardy through zones 6–8. A rain garden catches roof and driveway runoff and lets it soak in instead of rushing to the storm drain, and these natives are built for that boom-and-bust of flood then dry. Put the most water-tolerant species in the wet center and the merely moisture-loving ones up on the sloped edges. Once established they handle both the standing water and the dry weeks between storms.
Each one native to your region and hardy in zones 6–8 · see this collection in other states.
Amelanchier canadensis
Built for the wet center of a rain garden and the boom-and-bust of storm runoff, for clay and loam ground, where it flowers in Apr and May.
Zizia aurea
Takes the wet center of a rain garden through flood and dry spell alike, 1.5–2.5 ft tall, where it blooms Apr through Jun.
Cephalanthus occidentalis
For the wet center of a rain garden and damp low spots, for clay and loam ground, where it blooms Jun through Aug.
Physostegia virginiana
Happy in the wet center of a rain garden and ground that stays soggy after a storm, for clay and loam ground, where it flowers in Aug and Sep.
Lobelia siphilitica
Takes the wet center of a rain garden through flood and dry spell alike, hardy in zones 4–9, where it flowers in Aug and Sep.
Silphium perfoliatum
For the wet center of a rain garden and damp low spots, reaching 5–8 ft, where it blooms Jul through Sep.
Viburnum dentatum
For the wet center of a rain garden and damp low spots, for clay and loam ground, where it flowers in May and Jun.
Ilex verticillata
Takes the wet center of a rain garden through flood and dry spell alike, reaching 5–10 ft, where it flowers in Jun and Jul.
Veronicastrum virginicum
Built for the wet center of a rain garden and the boom-and-bust of storm runoff, 1.5–2 ft wide, where it blooms Jun through Aug.
Asclepias incarnata
Takes the wet center of a rain garden through flood and dry spell alike, rose pink flowers, where it flowers in Jul and Aug.
Eutrochium maculatum
Happy in the wet center of a rain garden and ground that stays soggy after a storm, 2–4 ft wide, where it blooms Jul through Sep.
Symphyotrichum novae-angliae
Takes the wet center of a rain garden through flood and dry spell alike, cold-hardy to zone 3, where it flowers in Sep and Oct.
Monarda didyma
For the wet center of a rain garden and damp low spots, reaching 2.5–4 ft, where it flowers in Jul and Aug.
Lobelia cardinalis
For the wet center of a rain garden and damp low spots, 2–4 ft tall, where it blooms Jul through Sep.
Liatris spicata
Takes the wet center of a rain garden through flood and dry spell alike, good through zone 9, where it flowers in Jul and Aug.
Mertensia virginica
Takes the wet center of a rain garden through flood and dry spell alike, for loam ground, where it blooms Mar through May.
Ilex glabra
Built for the wet center of a rain garden and the boom-and-bust of storm runoff, happy in sand, clay, and loam soil, where it flowers in May and Jun.
Cornus sericea
Takes the wet center of a rain garden through flood and dry spell alike, white, white berries flowers, where it flowers in May and Jun.
Physocarpus opulifolius
Happy in the wet center of a rain garden and ground that stays soggy after a storm, white to pink flowers, where it flowers in May and Jun.
Sambucus canadensis
For the wet center of a rain garden and damp low spots, creamy umbels flowers, where it flowers in Jun and Jul.
Eupatorium perfoliatum
Takes the wet center of a rain garden through flood and dry spell alike, for clay and loam ground, where it flowers in Aug and Sep.
Lindera benzoin
Happy in the wet center of a rain garden and ground that stays soggy after a storm, for clay and loam ground, where it flowers in Mar and Apr.
Verbena hastata
Built for the wet center of a rain garden and the boom-and-bust of storm runoff, violet-blue flowers, where it blooms Jul through Sep.
Andropogon gerardii
Happy in the wet center of a rain garden and ground that stays soggy after a storm, 2–3 ft wide.
2 more also qualify: Cinnamon Fern, Switchgrass.
Seed packets, plugs, and starter plants for many of these species ship to your door.
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