Here are some plants I recommend for clay soil. Those marked with ♦ are native or have native species available. The staff at your local fine nursery will have additional suggestions.
Trees that tolerate clay soil |
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NAME | BOTNICAL NAME | DESCRIPTION |
♦ River birch | Betula nigra ‘Heritage’ and others | Beautiful bark and yellow fall color |
♦ Green Ash | Fraxinus pennsylvanica | Good form, great shade tree |
♦ Larch | Larix spp. | A deciduous conifer with yellow fall color |
♦ Witch Hazel | Hamamelis virginiana | Late autumn fragrant flowers, yellow fall color |
Weeping willow | Salix spp. | Iconic tree but the messiest imaginable |
♦ Bald cypress | Taxodium disichum | Deciduous conifer, bronze fall color, can form “knees” |
♦ Arborvitae | Thuja occidentalis many cvs. | Readily available evergreen, fast grower, versatile, but deer browse on it |
♦ Black Haw Viburnum | Viburnum prunifolium | Tough small tree, white flowers, red fall color, fruit for birds, tolerates shade |
Shrubs that tolerate clay soil |
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♦ Serviceberry | Amelanchier | Red fruit and fall color |
♦ Bluestar | Amsonia hubrichtii | Blue flowers, fine-textured leaves turn yellow to peach in fall. Great massed. |
Flowering quince | Chaenomeles cvs. | Colorful spring flowers, fruit for jelly |
♦ Summersweet | Clethra alnifolia cvs. | Fragrant flowers in late summer and yellow fall foliage |
♦ Red twig dogwood | Cornus sericea ssp. | Prune old stems annually for best showy winter stems |
Grapeholly | Mahonia cvs. | Bold-textured broad-leaved evergreen with late winter blue fruit that birds relish, deer do not browse |
♦ Ninebark | Physocarpus opuifolius ‘Diabolo’ | Purple-leaved, tough, versatile, can be cut back for best new growth, ornamental bark |
♦ Elderberry | Sambucus canadensis | Graceful foliage, flat-topped white flowers produce fruit relished by birds (and good for pies) |
♦ Viburnum | Viburnum trilobum and V. dentatum | Red fruit and fall color |
Perennials that tolerate clay soil |
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♦ Anise hyssop | Agastache foeniculum cvs. | Long lasting blue flowers, bees love this plant |
♦ Swamp milkweed | Asclepias ssp. | Essential food source for butterfly caterpillars |
♦ Blue false indigo | Baptisia australis | Blue-purple lupine-like flowers early in spring, adds nitrogen to soil |
♦ Purple coneflower | Echinacea purpurea cvs. | Every garden must have, attracts butterflies |
♦ Joe-Pye weed | Eupatorium fistulosum | Tall, attracts butterflies |
Daylily | Hemerocallis spp. and cvs. | Every garden must have daylilies |
Hosta | Hosta spp. and cvs. | Indispensible shade plant, deer love |
♦ Blue Lobelia | Lobelia siphilitica | Deep blue flowers in late summer, forms colonies, butterflies attracted |
♦ Ostrich Fern | Matteuccia struthiopteris | Beautiful tall fern but very aggressive and hard to confine. Better to use Osmunda fern species with their dramatic cinnamon-brown fruiting stalks |
♦ Virginia bluebells | Mertensia virginica | Early spring bloomer, wonderful massed in woodland, goes dormant after flowering |
Rodgersia | Rodgersia spp. and cvs. | Bold textured |
♦ Cupplant | Silphium perfoliatum | Tall, single best species for attracting birds, especially goldfinches. Seeds aggressively |
♦ Ironweed | Vernonia novaboracensis | Fluffy brilliant purple flowers, tall, for the background of borders. Will seed around, good for wildflower gardens. |
Groundcover that tolerates clay soil |
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Bugleweed | Ajuga reptans many cvs. | The definitive groundcover for clay soil, spreads |
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