California native Asclepias fascicularis (Narrowleaf Milkweed)
plant material shot
plant material shot
California native Asclepias fascicularis (Narrowleaf Milkweed)
plant material shot
plant material shot
Asclepias fascicularis, Narrowleaf Milkweed

Asclepias fascicularis, Narrowleaf Milkweed

$22.00 Sale Save

Item is in stock Only 1 left in stock Item is out of stock Item is unavailable

Scientific name: Asclepias fascicularis

Common names: California native Narrowleaf Milkweed, Monarch Butterfly Plant

Size: 3-4' tall

A California native host for monarch butterflies.   It can reach about three feet tall and wide.  The Narrowleaf Milkweed provides food for monarch caterpillars and provides nectar for hummingbirds and nest building materials for other birds.  Milkweed goes deciduous in winter.

An easy California Native to grow in the Los Angeles area.   

Care:

- Plant in full sun

- Tolerant of a wide range of soil types, including clay

- Mulch heavily

- Water well for the first month

- Attracts butterflies, hummingbirds, and birds

- Drought tolerant

 - Toxic

- California Native 

This content type will accept rich text to help with adding styles and links to additional pages or content. Use this to add supplementary information to help your buyers.

You can use product metafields to assign content to this tab that is unique to an individual product. Use tabs to highlight unique features, sizing information, or other sales information.

Scientific name: Asclepias fascicularis

Common names: California native Narrowleaf Milkweed, Monarch Butterfly Plant

Size: 3-4' tall

A California native host for monarch butterflies.   It can reach about three feet tall and wide.  The Narrowleaf Milkweed provides food for monarch caterpillars and provides nectar for hummingbirds and nest building materials for other birds.  Milkweed goes deciduous in winter.

An easy California Native to grow in the Los Angeles area.   

Care:

- Plant in full sun

- Tolerant of a wide range of soil types, including clay

- Mulch heavily

- Water well for the first month

- Attracts butterflies, hummingbirds, and birds

- Drought tolerant

 - Toxic

- California Native