Yes, Euphorbia plants are generally considered deer resistant due to their toxic sap that deters animals from feeding on them.
Yes, phlox plants are generally considered deer resistant, as deer tend to avoid eating them due to their strong fragrance and taste.
Yes, creeping phlox plants are generally considered deer resistant due to their strong fragrance and tough foliage that deer tend to avoid.
No. Very few shrubs are. I have found buddleia t o be deer resistant, when other plants have been eaten.
Yes, phlox are deer resistant. The flowering plants in question tend to be more fragrant than deer like. But there always will be the chance that deer may graze phlox when they are sufficiently desperate, disoriented or famished.
To protect your phlox plants from deer damage, you can try using physical barriers like fences or netting, applying deer repellents, planting deer-resistant plants nearby, or using motion-activated devices to scare away the deer.
To protect arborvitae trees from deer damage, you can use physical barriers like fencing or netting, apply deer repellents, plant deer-resistant plants nearby, or consider planting more deer-resistant tree species.
To prevent deer damage to your arborvitae plants, you can use physical barriers like fences or netting, apply deer repellents, plant deer-resistant species, or use noise or motion-activated deterrents.
To protect your clematis plants from deer damage, you can use physical barriers like fences or netting, apply deer repellents, plant deer-resistant species around the clematis, or use motion-activated deterrents.
Echinacea is listed among the botany that deer don't like to eat, but a hungry deer will eat almost anything. You can find more plants listed below, that deer prefer not to eat.
Yes, garden phlox are generally not deer resistant and may be eaten by deer if they are present in the area.
Euphorbia lactea forma cristata has the common names of Candelabra Plant, Crested Euphorbia, Elkhorn, and Frilled Fan. Euphorbia lactea forma cristata variegata is the variegated form.
Chenopodium and Euphorbia