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   Simcoe County Master Gardeners  

PLANT PROFILE

COMMON NAME: Wild Geranium, cranesbill
BINOMIAL: Geranium maculatum

FamilyGeraniaceae
Cdn Native Rangefrom MN eastward through ON, QU, NS, and NL
Natural habitatopen woodlands, wetlands, limestone, rocky soil, etc.
Typeherbaceous perennial native to deciduous woodlands
Featuresshowiest of the native geraniums; foliage can turn red in fall and stamens may curl after flowering to provide visual interest
Growth habitgrows in dense clumps and spreads by both seeds and rhizome; flowers more in full sun; flower buds are enclosed in winter buds at the tips of the rhizomes
Mature height30 – 46 cm, (12 – 18”)
Mature spread20 –30 cm (8 – 12”)
Life span5 – 10 years with some lasting up to 20 years under ideal conditions
Cdn Hardiness Zone3 to 9
Growing conditionsPartial Sun to Part Shade. Plant in compost rich soil
Soil conditionsmoist, well drained, soils; can tolerate clay loam and sandy loam soils
Watering needsn/a
Fertilizer needscompost, natural mulch
Tolerancedrought; salt; shade; black walnut; deer browsing; rabbit browsing
Maintenance ranklow
Maintenance needsdeadheading is not recommended as the plants don’t normally re-bloom; can be lightly sheared back and shaped after flowering
Bloomattractive rose pink, lavender or darker purple flowers bloom in clusters of 2–5; flowers are upturned; blooms for about one month in late spring–early summer
Fruitdistinct explosive fruit capsule is produced 3 to 5 weeks after flowering; turns upward and catapults seeds 3–9 m (10 to 30 ft) away from the plant
Pollinator supportlarval host plant for the leaf mining moth and the white-marked tussock moth; important food source for the cranesbill miner and the specialist mining bee; source of nectar and pollen for the small carpenter bee, sweet or furrow bee, orchard mason bee and the fruit worm beetle
Environmental supportbirds and small mammals eat the seeds; soil stabilization; landscape restoration
Garden Usegroundcover; woodland gardens, borders, rain gardens; around pond edges
Risks & Cautionsfeeding damage from slugs and aphids; rust and leaf spots; deer browsing

References: Native Plant Trust Plant Search, https://plantfinder.nativeplanttrust.org/Plant-Search; Native Plant Trust Go Botany, https://gobotany.nativeplantrust.org; Lorraine Johnson and Sheila Colla. A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating Habitat for Native Pollinators