Purple loosestrife: a pretty, prolific & invasive late summer bloom
In addition to goldenrod, purple loosestrife is among our most colorful and prolific late season blooms.
The showy, magenta-colored flowers are attractive and eye-catching among young and old alike. And while loosestrife really brightens the landscape, it does come with a downside.
It can thrive in the damp soil of a roadside ditch....
or run amok in and around wetlands -- and therein lies the problem. A non-native plant, purple loosestrife can easily take over large tracts, in the process choking out beneficial plants like cattails, rushes and sedges, which provide food, cover and nesting for waterfowl, furbearers and a wide variety bird species.