Next Open Greenhouse Day - April 15th!

Are you making a shopping list for the Greenhouse Days? The greenhouse will be open to visitors every Saturday in April from 10 am - 2 pm, where you may shop for native plants from Ruffner Mountain and Turkey Creek Nature Preserve. This week’s feature plant is Cherokee sedge (Carex cherokeensis).

“Sedges have edges, and rushes are round, but grasses have nodes from their tips to the ground.”

This rhyme gives us an easy way to remember how to distinguish the difference between sedges, rushes, and grasses. Sedges have edges, but they are also great planted along an edge of a flower border, and they definitely deserve more use in our gardens. Sedges can help set the foundation, create a base layer, fill in the gaps, and offer blooms as well (yes, sedges bloom!). The wheat-like inflorescences of Cherokee sedge droop on stalks above the grasslike leaves. This sedge bunches together and adds structure and accent to plant borders.

Once you are hooked on sedges, you’ll want to add more to the yard. They are great as ground covers or lawn alternatives (simply mow like turf grass). Cherokee sedge is very adaptable to sun and shade, wet or dry. It grows very well in our irrigation-free habitat gardens!

Next Open Greenhouse Day - April 8th!

Are you making a shopping list for the Greenhouse Days?

The greenhouse will be open to visitors every Saturday in April from 10 am - 2 pm, where you may shop for native plants from Ruffner Mountain and Turkey Creek Nature Preserve.

This week, we’re featuring wild columbine (Aquilegia canadensis) and golden Alexanders (Zizia aurea). Blooming together now in the Ruffner Habitat Gardens, the combination is bright and colorful. The red, dangling, nectar-rich flowers of wild columbine attract butterflies, hummingbirds, and early pollinators.

Once the flowers set seed and the seed capsules begin to brown and split, tiny seeds begin to spill. Allow the plant to self-sow, or collect and scatter seeds to other areas of your habitat garden. Golden Alexanders are host to the black swallowtail butterfly, and it is fun to look for the caterpillars. Umbrella-shaped, bright yellow flowers attract all kinds of pollinators, and the flowers last a long time in the garden. This plant is a prolific self-seeder. Grow these plants together, and you won’t be disappointed. The foliage on both stays green throughout most of the winter.

Ruffner Mountain + Turkey Creek Partnership

"Our long-term vision is of a strong countywide operating structure and dedicated public funding for Jefferson County’s current, and future, preserves—" Carlee Sanford, Ruffner Mountain Executive Director.

Thank you, Bham Now - Birmingham’s modern media, and Patrick Byington for the thoughtful write-up on the partnership between Ruffner Mountain and Turkey Creek Nature Preserve.

Big thanks, also, to Birmingham-Southern College for their stewardship for over 14 years and to the City of Pinson Alabama for governmental support.

We are excited about the future of our nature preserves!

Greenhouse Days (What's That?)

We're trying something different this year...

Instead of the typical weekend-long spring plant sale— we are opening the Ruffner Greenhouse every Saturday in April from 10 am - 2 pm for visitors to shop for native plants from Ruffner Mountain and Turkey Creek Nature Preserve. This means more opportunities to buy native plants!

Ruffner members will receive 10% off their purchase!

Not a member? Become one!

https://ruffnermountain.org/membership

You can view the plant inventory list here:

https://ruffnermountain.org/2023-spring-plant-sale-inventory

(Please note: some plant species may not be available for all dates, quantities may be limited, and in-person only—no online sales this time.)

The Ruffner Greenhouse is located at the entrance of Ruffner Mountain's South East Lake Entrance and Nature Center; 1214 81st Street S. Birmingham, AL 35206. Parking for plant shoppers will be shared with all Ruffner visitors at this parking lot and don't worry, we will have directional signage to the greenhouse!

Graphics by Kyle Humphrey

Happy Spring!

Today is the first day of spring and here are a few visitor reminders:

PRESERVE, PAVILION, AND TRAILS
OPEN TUES - SUN
7 AM - 5 PM Nov - Feb
7 AM - 7 PM Mar - Oct
CLOSED MONDAYS

NATURE CENTER: Based on staff capacity, the nature center is open Thursday through Sunday from 9:00 am - 5:00 pm.

Spring Blooms on the Mountain

It might not feel like it, but spring has sprung. Greening up and blooming on the mountain: redbuds (Cercis canadensis), oaks (Quercus spp.), hackberries (Celtis occidentalis), scarlet buckeyes (Aesculus pavia), dogwoods (Cornus florida), plums (Prunus spp.), black cherries (Prunus serotina), and fragrant sumacs (Rhus aromatica)

Reminder: Ruffner Mountain is a nature preserve. Please don’t pick the flowers. Leave them for the bees and butterflies!

Habitat Garden Club Resumes

The first Habitat Garden Club workday of the year was a fun one. Winter stems were cut back to welcome new spring growth. Thanks to Anne, Elise, Joni, Katie, Larry, Tom, and Maura for the hard work! The habitat gardens are looking good! If you would like to join HGC, we meet every Tuesday from 9-noon in the parking lot of the South East Lake entrance to Ruffner—1214 81st Street South.