Help Identifying Plant
2 months ago
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Please help identify plant w/ small black fruits
Comments (11)Agree with Floral_uk, it looks like one of the black nightshades, probably S. douglasii given your location. There are several very similar species, and they grow wild pretty much everywhere. I take great pains to ensure that they never go to seed in my gardens, and they still crop up from dormant seed or from bird droppings. When I lived in San Diego, the local Hmong community cultivated one of the black nightshades extensively. There is a pretty god write up of the various species & their properties in the link below. Personally, I would just treat it like the weed that it is & dispose of it. Really nice jade plant bush behind it, by the way. Here is a link that might be useful: Black nightshade...See MoreHelp identifying plant
Comments (7)Those dead woody stalks may be cut off now with shears. It sends up new ones each year. It is not a houseplant. Place it outside in bright full sun in rich soil. In the summer it will have crowns of tiny pink flower clusters which attract butterflies and moths. Then the flowers fade to a nice cinnamon in the fall and dry out. Cut the stalks down in December when they look like tan wood. I was given a sprig when I was 17 and now I am 60 and have given away many new divisions from mine. In 2 or 3 years when yours gets large, you may cut out 3 inch tall stalks in the spring to root easily in moist soil. The root base is woody too and the leaves hold lots of moisture so do not plant in a boggy area nor over water. Grow it on the dry side and feed with fertilizer twice during spring and summer. Good luck with it. They are very easy....See MoreNeed help identifying plant
Comments (6)It's not native, and it's spreading into southeastern forests. The Piedmont has already been damaged enough. https://davesgarden.com/guides/articles/view/2097...See MoreHelp identifying plant
Comments (2)looks like iris to me ... especially if the leaves are at more of a right angle to the rhizome ... but that just might be a camera trick .. see link if you confirm such.. then it should be planted.. so the top of the rhizome is at or slightly about the soil surface ... welcome to the forums ... ken https://duckduckgo.com/?q=iris+rhizomes&t=ffcm&iax=images&ia=images...See MoreRelated Professionals
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