Fall is just around the corner, and some of my summer bloomers are beginning to wind down. But birds and other wildlife continue to need sustenance from plants, and I continue to need focal points in my garden. Fortunately, buttonbush, a sadly underused shrub, is filling both of our needs.
Sometimes referred to as honey balls, buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis) is the last to leaf out in spring and the last summer-flowering shrub to bloom in my garden. But it makes up for its tardiness wizth its unique clusters of spherical, white blossoms that resemble golf-ball-sized Sputnik satellites. Set against the plant’s glossy, dark-green foliage, they are truly otherworldly.
The shrub is native to eastern Canada and the continental United States, from Maine to Florida and west to the Great Plains, with some occurrences in the Southwest and California, as well as Cuba and Central America. In these areas, it can be found growing wild near lakes and ponds — sometimes in standing water — and under large shrubs and trees in forests.
Swamp-loving bird feeder
Its seeds, fruit and nectar feed dozens of bird species, including hummingbirds and waterfowl, butterflies, moths, bumble bees, honey bees and smaller native bees. Some mammals, such as beavers, feed on the plant’s stems and leaves, yet it is considered somewhat resistant to deer browsing (your results may vary).