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SPONSORED LINKS:
Coffeeberry (some varieties prefer well-drained soil) Ribes sanguineum* Red flowering currant: Sambucus mexicana: Blue Elderberry : Mahonia spp.* http://www.stopwaste.org/home/index.asp?page=629
They also eat berries such as elderberry, coffeeberry, and poison oak, acorns, and garden produce like peas, plums, and apricots. May also eat spiders, millipedes, and snails. http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/California_Towhee/lifehistory
Rhamnus californica (Coffeeberry) Salix sp. (Willow) Minute pirate bug: Achillea sp. (Yarrow) Baccharis sp. (Coyote brush, Mulefat) Eriogonum sp. (Buckwheat) http://www.stopwaste.org/home/index.asp?page=402
California coffeeberry (Rhamnus californica). Leaf spots. Western starflower (Trientalis latifolia), a herb, was found with numerous leafspots with yellow halo in the Big Sur area ... http://www.forestpathology.org/dis_sod.html
Appropriate for shade conditions: Plant Low on Bank (in or near water) Plant in the Middle of the Bank http://mcstoppp.org/Plants.htm
Ferns, coffeeberry or wild roses. $10 contribution. Provide a Redwood tree. Coast redwoods can live to be 2,000 years old. $50 contribution. http://www.wildwoodfoundation.org/grove.html
... in a narrow band along the California coast, coastal scrub is made of short evergreen shrubs and other plants that include coyote brush, California blackberry, coffeeberry ... http://www.openspacetrust.org/activities/tour_hiking.html
After the meeting, continue on the Jacks Peak Trail back to the Skyline Nature Trail to get to the Coffeeberry Trail. Continue on Coffeeberry Trail to the Lower Ridge Trail. http://wildrecovery.org/2007/2007_Jacks_Peak.htm
Coffeeberry Rhanmus californica: 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. Hollyleaf cherry Prunus ilicifolia: 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. Yarrow* Achillea millefolium http://www.attra.org/attra-pub/farmscaping/fsappendixf.html
Toyon, coffeeberry, California lilac, dwarf coyotebrush (male clones won't seed) and Oregon grape are easy as an evergreen backdrop that provides flower and color in season. http://cnps.org/cnps/grownative/pdf/native_garden-zagory.pdf
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