ABOUT US
MilkweedOne is the name of our native plant nursery on Etsy specializing in growing milkweeds native to the US. Our sister nursery, Midwest Native Perennials, has hundreds of other, native perennials for sale. From container grown plants to seeds we work with 40 species of milkweeds from across the continental US. We began both of these businesses to offer high quality plants to our customers and to back those plants up with good advice and service. We are nursery professionals with decades in the business and a staff with degrees in Botany and Entomology, so we know our plants and our bugs! In fact, we're trying to help you set the table for the insects in your home landscape (especially butterflies!) and to help bring much needed diversity to our home landscapes and gardens. Please read the entire listing below as it contains pertinent descriptions of our products and care guides which change with the seasons. We want to ensure you know exactly what you're buying so that there are no surprises or disappointments when you open the box. The descriptions and instructions you are reading below are designed to give you the best chance of success. Regardless of what time of year you are buying, our plants have been carefully grown and are healthy, even if they are dormant. We encourage you to contact us prior to planting if you have questions.
WHAT YOU'RE BUYING/CARE
We are offering four (4) Butterfly Weed plants, Asclepias tuberosa, in 1.5-pint containers (3.5" X 3.5" X 5" deep). Our plants are grown from seed for this growing season or may be two years old. Butterfly Weed is an easily grown milkweed preferring medium, medium dry to dry soil in full or part sun. Once established they can grow to 2'. We recommend an 18" to 24" spacing. Lovely, brilliant orange flowers are attractive to pollinators and the leaves are an important food source for Monarch butterflies. This plant is native to nearly all of the United States except some of the Mountain States; USDA hardiness zones 3-9. This description is a generalization; please check the current USDA Hardiness Map if you have questions. If you're trying to grow this species outside of its native range, we suggest you research the conditions it is found in naturally and try to mimic that. We have ours growing in a large pot in half day sun and infrequent watering. Our plants are shipped in custom designed containers to ensure they reach you in the same way they left here; healthy and growing well. This packaging system requires each plant get an individual box and the four (4) individual boxes are bundled together into a single shipping box so you must buy 4 plants. They can be mixed or matched with the other species we sell at MilkweedOne just message me through the store telling me how many of each species you'd like. If we don't get special instructions from you, we'll send four of this species along.
SPRING AND SUMMER SALES/PLANTING AND CARE
If you are purchasing plants during the growing season, they may be up to 12" tall which is the maximum size of the shipping box. If you're purchasing in early spring, they'll be smaller as we do not heat our greenhouses to reduce our carbon footprint. Purchases made in mid to late spring (in central Ohio) are at or are approaching this 12" size, but this will ultimately depend on the weather. If we have a warm spring, plants will size up more quickly. If it's a cool spring the plant growth may lag. The size of your plant may vary but we ship the largest plants first. Some species, like Prairie Milkweed or Narrow Leaf Milkweed are somewhat spindly in their first year of growth. This is normal. The second and subsequent years are when they grow for show! Please review the CARE information above to determine the best sun exposure and soil moisture for this species and site the plant accordingly. A proper sized hole for planting perennials is a little larger and a little deeper than the size of the pot. After excavating the hole break up the soil removed into relatively fine sized particles, no chunks. You may add a handful of peat moss to the soil you're using to fill around the roots to help with moisture retention. Pop the plant from its pot taking care not to disturb the roots as much as possible. Place the plant in the hole and fill in any remaining areas around the root ball with your excavated soil. You don't want to plant it too deep or too shallow. If you keep your soil level and the pot soil level even, then you're good. Firm (not pack or stomp) the soil around the root ball and water in thoroughly. For the next couple of weeks check to see that the plant isn't wilting. If it is, water thoroughly ensuring watering goes deep to the roots. We hesitate to tell you to water them with some sort of a frequency (i.e., daily, weekly, etc.) because this could lead to overwatering issues. The bottom line is this: water only when needed and the best way to judge that is to look at the soil around the plant and the plant itself. If the soil around the plant is dark(er) then moisture is present so don't water. If the plant appears to be flagging or wilting, then by all means water it thoroughly. A little bit of wilting won't hurt. New vegetative growth or flowers forming is a good sign that your plant is becoming established. If there is still a danger of frost in your area, then take precautions to protect the plants until consistently warm weather has arrived. You may fertilize lightly at planting time if you are in your growing season. If you're planting during fall or even winter, then hold off on fertilizing until spring has returned to your area.
Please note that our plants are grown without the use of pesticides or fungicides. This means they can be used as caterpillar food right out of the box. In the nursery they are grown in tight groups which can cause some lower leaves to yellow or fall off. Some leaves may have spots or even some signs of chewing if caterpillars have been working them. This is a cosmetic issue not a plant health issue.
LATE SUMMER, FALL AND WINTER SALES; WHAT TO EXPECT
During late summer and fall native perennials begin to prepare for the winter dormant season. How they do this depends on the species but, by and large, they do this by stopping growth, dropping leaves and the stem dying back to an underground taproot or perhaps a rosette of leaves at ground level. All of this is normal and to be expected. The milkweed taproot has buds on it that are the promise of next year's leaves and blooms. The taproot in function is much like a carrot in that it absorbs water, fertilizer, minerals and stores food reserves and anchors the plant. The taproot can withstand the rigors of winter and will initiate new growth again in the spring. Here in the nursery, we've been watering and fertilizing all summer to promote the best taproot growth possible. All of this is designed to give the plant energy to get through winter and to get growing in spring.
If you're purchasing plants in September, you can expect the plants to be cut back to fit within the shipping box. They may have few or no leaves and with a stem that is green to greenish and perhaps beginning to turn brown in preparation for winter. In the nursery, we'll have our first frost, on average, about October 15 so these plants are getting ready for that eventuality as early as September. There's nothing special you need to do...just plant it as outlined above and to give it a little bit extra TLC by applying a layer of mulch about 2" thick to act as a blanket. Our plants are exposed to outside conditions as part of our growing regimen. Plants purchased in September are already preparing for winter and there's no turning back for them. Do not fertilize until you start to see new growth next spring.
If you're purchasing plants in October or later, they may be cut back to right above the media. The planting procedure is the same as outlined above. What you're buying is a dormant but established taproot with one year's worth of growth and nutrition stored in it which will produce a better plant next year (when it's two years old) than one grown in a single year from seed. This dormant, potted plant is a better product than other, barerooted plants being sold. The root is the most important part of the plant and barerooting the plant causes significant root damage. Our packaging system allows us to send dormant, potted plants which have healthy, undamaged roots. Please see the picture of the dormant plant in the images above to familiarize yourself with what you'll be receiving if you're buying plants late in the year. The picture is actually of dormant Swamp Milkweed but most other species we sell will be cut back significantly and so would look similar.
We do not recommend buying our milkweeds late in the season to feed caterpillars. Between us cutting them back to fit into the box and them going dormant there's not much, if any, useful foliage to feed hungry caterpillars. Horsetail Milkweed, Whorled Milkweed and Hall's Milkweed stay greener longer in the nursery and may be candidates for late season feeding of caterpillars, but this will vary from year to year. Here in central Ohio on 11/1/2021 our field grown Horsetail and Whorled Milkweed are still green with reasonable leaves for feeding caterpillars. Oddly enough, in the greenhouse the Whorled Milkweeds are completely dormant while the Horsetail and Hall's are still looking good. Now all that being said we have not had frost here yet. All bets may be off when frost arrives. If you protected your plants by covering them during frost in your area you might be able to get a few more weeks of caterpillar food from them.
A NOTE FROM THE GROWER...
Thank you for considering purchasing our plants! We treat them very well throughout the growing season, so you'll be rewarded with strong plants and eventually lovely flowers. Please note again that you're buying plants from a nursery in OHIO. If you're purchasing plants during the OHIO growing season (roughly April to August) you'll be receiving plants that are green and growing vigorously. If you're purchasing in them in September and later (this being fall or winter in OHIO) our stock may be going dormant or be totally dormant when you receive it. Dormancy is a natural, physiological response to shortening days and colder temperatures which allows the plant to survive the rigors of winter. Even if these plants are lucky enough to be going to Florida or any other warmer climate they'll still be attuned to Ohio's climate until they are acclimated and grown in your climate.
In mid-April of 2023, the size of our 1 year old plants are as follows: Common Milkweed, just breaking through the soil to up less than 1"; Swamp Milkweed, to 6" tall, Showy Milkweed, just breaking through the soil to up less than 2", Prairie Milkweed, not breaking through the soil, Whorled Milkweed, to 6" tall, Butterfly Weed, just breaking through the soil to less than 1" tall, Arizona Milkweed, just breaking through the soil to 2" tall, Horsetail Milkweed, up 2-3", Slimleaf Milkweed, just breaking through the soil to 2" tall, Poke Milkweed, just breaking through the soil to 2" tall. For all of these species there are still individual plants that have not grown enough to break through the soil. We try to send the tallest plants first but that does not mean you wouldn't get a milkweed that is still a taproot. Please note that the above information is designed to help you understand what you are buying from us and every year will be different. In warmer springs the plants will be further along. In cooler springs the plants will be smaller.
During the growing season we prune all of our plants as necessary to fit them into their shipping boxes. We cut them back to nearly the top of the media for late season sales and to overwinter them. Most of our plants sold late in the growing season will not have any or very few green leaves. This is the natural way the plant prepares for winter. Plant the root/taproot and the potting soil mass as a single unit as you would a plant in full leaf. Do not plant the plastic pot and do not remove the taproot from the soil mass as this would only injure the roots. Please see full planting instructions above. Please see picture labelled dormant Milkweed if you're ordering during Fall, Winter or early Spring. This picture accurately illustrates what most of our plants look like going into winter and through early spring.
The picture(s) on this listing are for reference purposes only so you can see what the flowers look like. You should not expect to get a plant that is in bloom because most would be too tall to ship.
Please read the entire description and look at the pictures so that you aren't unpleasantly surprised when you open the box. If you have any questions, please feel free to message me through this site.
Sorry for all the disclaimers but they have become necessary to try and further educate especially gardening newcomers to the wonders of native perennials and buying plants online. Some buyers have purchased our plants in November and December expecting to receive milkweeds that are in flower and that will never be the case for our Ohio grown milkweeds. This would understandably be a huge disappointment when you opened the box and we're trying our best to prevent that. We'd rather provide too much information than not enough so that you can make the best gardening decisions! Thank you! Rev. 5/29/2023