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Garden Stories

Plants that made headlines in 2025

From runways to rainforests, plants stole the spotlight in 2025. Here are the stories that made us fall for them all over again.

Grassy plumage is the new black.

Made from hand-dyed plant material, these have all the fluff and float of real feathers, without the birds.

The exact plant species is under wraps, but we have our own ideas!

 

fashion inspired by nature

In addition to ornamental grasses like this, we think sedges could make fabulous plumage. An added bonus? Many are native to Illinois and make a great lawn alternative.

 

This desert cutie is鈥 a sunflower?

Meet the woolly devil (Ovicula biradiata), the to be discovered in a U.S. national park in 50 years. 鈥淢y first reaction is disbelief that it鈥檚 in the sunflower family,鈥 said Senior Horticulturist Sarah Nolimal. 鈥淭hen I think, why am I surprised? Asteraceae is a huge group. My final reaction: It's so cute!鈥

The woolly devil reminds us of some beauties in the Arid Greenhouse, like Mammallaria gemnispina. 鈥淭he fuzz on a cactus is actually modified leaves that protect the plant from the sun and keep water in,鈥 said Sarah. 鈥翱惫颈肠耻濒补鈥檚 white fuzz isn鈥檛 the same thing, since it鈥檚 not a cactus, but it likely evolved for a similar purpose: surviving life in the desert.鈥 

Mammillaria geminispina

Wooly devil, by Debra L. Manley,

 

 

A name fit for a princess.

rose garden

Rosa 鈥楥atherine鈥檚 Rose鈥

 

 

A floribunda rose was after the Princess of Wales to celebrate the healing power of nature. We have a few princess ties of our own: 鈥淏ack in 1991, Princess Margaret dedicated the English Walled Garden during a royal visit,鈥 said Senior Horticulturist Heather Sherwood. 鈥淭here鈥檚 another Princess here, too: a beautiful clematis named Diana, which grows near the ramp toward the Dwarf Conifer Garden, not far from the oak planted in Princess Margaret鈥檚 honor that still stands tall today.鈥

Think growing orchids is hard? Try starting from seed.

People can't get enough of these divas, even if they鈥檙e famously fussy. Case in point: Different wild orchids rely on different fungi to survive, and is helping scientists figure out which blooms need which mycorrhizal friends before they ever put on a show.

鈥淏ecause orchid seeds are so tiny鈥攖he size of dust鈥攖hey don鈥檛 have built-in food reserves like other seeds. Instead, they rely on specific mycorrhizal fungi for the energy they need to germinate and grow,鈥 said Johanna Hutchins, orchid floriculturist at the Garden, who works with ecologists and other botanical gardens to reintroduce rare orchids into the wild. 鈥淪ome species can only sprout with the right fungus around, and some orchids even require different fungi at different life stages.鈥

Apparently for, that life-giving sustenance comes from wood-decaying fungi鈥攑roof that even deadwood can be full of life!

orchid seed

Cremastra appendiculata var. Variabilis, by Alpsdake,

 

Abundance is having a moment.

evening island

Evening Island

Full of color, texture, and four-season interest, filled with native and drought-tolerant plants are a vibrant, climate-smart alternative to thirsty lawns.

鈥淥ne of the things I love most about tending a naturalistic garden is showing how beautiful it is to garden with nature, not against it,鈥 said Horticulturist Helen Bartlett, who cares for Evening Island. 鈥淟eave plants standing through winter and you get to enjoy every stage: buds, blooms, seedpods, sculptural stalks. They also feed and shelter wildlife. Plus, gardening with nature usually means fewer tasks to check off your list.鈥

Craft your plant palette and let your garden bloom boldly. Embrace 鈥攇o wild.