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California Brickellbush

Brickellia californica

Care

Sun

full sun, part shade

Water

very low

Soil

Fast, Medium, Slow; Tolerant of sandy or clay soil, often in rocky soil.

Size

2–7ft tall , 2–7ft wide

Bloom

Jun-Nov

Foliage

Evergreen

Deer

Resistant

Container

Friendly

Native Range

Desert and interior scrub of California's deserts, particularly the Mojave and Colorado deserts from 500-4000 ft elevation.

Care Guide

Planting

Plant California Brickellbush in full sun where you can enjoy its incredible fragrance during summer and fall blooms - the scent carries a considerable distance. It thrives in fast to slow draining soil and tolerates sandy, clay, or rocky conditions, so don't worry about amending heavily. Position it where its subtle, inconspicuous flowers won't be the focal point of your garden design, since this shrub is grown more for fragrance than appearance. Space according to mature size (2–7 feet tall) and plant in spring or fall for best establishment.

After Planting

Water weekly during the first summer to establish roots, then taper to just once or twice monthly once established - this is a very low water plant and overwatering is the main way to kill it. This evergreen shrub tolerates Bay Area winters down to -15°F, so no winter protection needed. You can prune after flowering ends in fall to shape the plant, but it's not required; it naturally forms a thickly branched shrub. By year two, you should barely water it except during drought, letting our native rainfall do most of the work.

Visit Calscape for more information about California Brickellbush

Wildlife Supported

Insects

hig Buta Moth
Larval Host · Year-Round

Specialist moth using Brickellia as larval host; caterpillar activity summer-fall

Larval Host · Year-Round

Larval host plant for this dusky wing butterfly species; caterpillar development spring-summer

Larval Host · Year-Round

Larval host plant for skipper butterfly; caterpillars feed on foliage spring through summer

Foliage · Year-Round

Sap-feeding aphid on foliage; populations peak during growing season

Larval Host · Year-Round

Opportunistic herbivore with multiple broods; larval activity spring through fall

Larval Host · Year-Round

Multi-brooded butterfly using plant as larval host; caterpillars present spring through fall

Larval Host · Year-Round

Nocturnal moth with caterpillars feeding on foliage; reproductive season summer-fall

Birds

Seeds · Year-Round

Primary seed consumption during fall and winter months when other food sources diminish

Where to Buy

East Bay Wilds

2110 Eighth St, Suite 202, Berkeley

Fri 9:30am-4pm (occasional Sat, call ahead)

1.5 mi (510) 409-5858 Website
Native Here Nursery

101 Golf Course Dr, Tilden Regional Park, Berkeley

Sat 10am-2pm

3.0 mi (510) 549-0211 Website