Solidago flexicaulis '' zigzag goldenrod from North Creek Nurseries

Solidago flexicaulis

Common: zigzag goldenrod
  • Height: 1'-3'
  • Spread: 1'-3'
  • Spacing: 12"-18"
  • Hardiness Zone(s): 3-8

More Photos

Plant Details

Solidago flexicaulis brings pollinators to your dappled shade areas with a subtle yellow flower clusters in mid-summer to fall. A hardy native perennial, it tolerates deer, shade, and clay soils.


Characteristics & Attributes

Exposure

  • Full Sun
  • Full Shade
  • Part Sun

Soil Moisture Needs

  • Dry
  • Average

Green Infrastructure

  • Woodland
  • Meadow/Prairie

Wetland Indicator Status

  • Falcutative Upland (FACU)

Plug Type

  • Landscape Plug™

For Animals

  • Pollinator-friendly
  • Songbird-friendly
  • Deer Resistant

Attributes

  • Drought Tolerant
  • Clay Tolerance
  • Native to North America

Season of Interest (Flowering)

  • Late Summer
  • Fall

Propagation Type

  • Open pollinated

Care & Maintenance

An eastern North American native that is easy to grow in well-drained, average to moist soils.  This woodland edge species does best in dappled sun, but also grows in full sun and full shade.

Interesting Notes

Convincing gardeners to grow goldenrods is a bit like trying to sell Toyotas in Detroit, but I will continue anyway. They are certainly ubiquitous in the fall landscape and are still wrongly accused of causing hayfever. Therefore, it bears repeating that goldenrods, like aster, Joe-Pye, ironweeds, and all the Composites, are insect-pollinated, so their pollen is heavy and sticky in order to facilitate transfer by our six-legged friends. It is the wind-pollinated plants like grasses, ragweed and many trees (I am allergic to maples for example) that produce the great quantities of light, airborne pollen that get into our noses and throats and cause the immune reaction known as hayfever. There are goldenrods for every situation, and if you avoid the aggressively weedy species like S. canadensis (My apologies to Canada) and S. graminifolia, they are agreeable garden subjects at home in the border, meadow, rock, or shade garden. Once I started to learn the different species, I became more and more aware of their subtle differences and convinced of their important role in native ecosystems as soil stabilizers and sources of food and shelter for wildlife. They are beautiful in leaf and flower, too, and no wildflower garden is complete without a few of our hundred or so species scattered around. - William Cullina, The New England Wild Flower Society Guide to Growing and Propagating Wildflowers, p. 197

A great, compact pollinator plant for part shade conditions.  Semi-evergreen basal leaves provide excellent erosion control.