Plant Suggestions for your Rain Garden

Dec 16, 2022

Plant Suggestions for your Rain Garden

Dec 16, 2022

Last week in this column we suggested creating a swale in your home garden to capture rain and practice effective water conservation. If you have been inspired to start planning a swale, you may be looking forward to the fun of selecting plants for this garden feature.

Therefore, this week's Real Dirt is a list of appropriate plants for the kind of rain swale discussed in the previous article. It is far from an exhaustive list, but it provides a solid start for those beginning such a project. Because our region's climate of hot summers and (with luck) moist winters requires plantings that can withstand these extremes, most of the species suggested here are California natives adapted for those conditions. Species from other Mediterranean climates are also good bets. By design, a swale has different zones of moisture, from a soggy base to a dry upper bank, so the water requirements of countless species can be met (this is one reason why our list is by necessity incomplete).

Note that our merciless summers require additional irrigation for even drought-tolerant native plants while they are getting established. A spare but regular drip-irrigation line for the first two summers will improve survival rates.

Cool-season grasses and herbs to line a grassy swale or the banks of a rock creek:

  • Sedges (Carex species) and rushes (Juncus species) for sun
  • Yerba buena (Clinopidium douglasii) for part-shade

Deep-rooted, larger grasses to anchor:

  • Deer grass (Muhlenbergia patens)
  • Native fescues (Festuca californica, F. idahoensis, F. rubrica)
  • Creeping wildrye (Leymus triticoides)

Perennials that tolerate winter moist, summer dry conditions:

  • Douglas iris (Iris douglasii)
  • California fuchsia (Epilobium canum)
  • Prostrate manzanita (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi)
  • Buckwheats (Eriogonum species)
  • Fleabane daisies (Erigeron species)
  • Yarrow (Achillea millefolium)
  • Common monkeyflower/aka sticky-monkey (Mimulus aurantiacus)
  • Yellow monkeyflower/aka seep mimulus (Mimulus guttatus)
  • California coneflower (Rudbeckia californica)
  • Hummingbird sage (Salvia spathacea) and other salvia species

Drought-tolerant ferns for shade

  • Polypody fern (Polypodium californicum)
  • Western sword fern (Polystichum munitum)
  • Wood fern (Dryopteris arguta)

 Shrubs and small trees for banks

  • Hybrid rockrose (Cistus skanbergii)
  • Barberry (Berberis aka Mahonia pinnata)
  • Toyon (Heteromeles arbutifolia)
  • California coffeeberry (Rhamnus californica)
  • Gooseberry (Ribes speciosum)
  • Wood rose (Rosa gymnocarpa)
  • St. Catherine's Lace (Eriogonum giganteum)
  • Redbud (Cercis occidentalis)
  • Mountain mahogany (Cercocarpus betuloides)
  • Red twig dogwood (Cornus sericea)
  • Ceanothus species
  • Manzanitas (Arctostaphylos species)

UC Master Gardeners of Butte County are part of the University of California Cooperative Extension (UCCE) system. To learn more about us and our upcoming events, and for help with gardening in our area, visit our website. If you have a gardening question or problem, email the Hotline at mgbutte@ucanr.edu or leave a phone message on our Hotline at (530) 538-7201. To speak to a Master Gardener about a gardening issue, or to drop by the MG office during Hotline hours, see the most current information on our Ask Us Hotline webpage.