2026-2 Sempervirens

In the latest Sempervirens

The "Wood Wide Web," rare plants and the endangered species gap, find lost Butternut trees
Sempervirens
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News & Updates

🌻 The latest Sempervirens is here! 8 May 2026

🌻 Save the dates: the 2026 annual meeting will take place 2-4 October 2026, in Wakefield, Virginia. 3 April 2026

🌻 Winners of the fifth annual Wildflower of the Year T-shirt Design Contest have been announced. 27 March 2026

🌻 Video recordings of both sessions of the 2026 Annual Workshop are available in a Vimeo showcase. 27 March 2026

🌻Thank you for supporting our 2025 fundraiser benefiting the Flora of Virginia. The campaign has ended. If you would like to support the Flora, please donate directly. 3 March 2026

🌻 Introducing the 2026 Wildflower of the Year, Ghost Pipes (Monotropa uniflora). Read all about it. 25 January 2026

🌻 Now with its own menu pick: Botanizing with Marion.  20 June 2025

• A New Online Dictionary of Virginia Botanical Etymology. This dictionary, compiled and edited by Michael Charters, lists Latin, Greek, and other derivations of botanical and biographic names in Virginia. View the Online Dictionary here. 20 August 2024

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Natives Are Glamorous Plants!

April 14, 2014 |

“Natives are the most glamorous things in the world,” says Randee Wilson, “It really gnaws on me to hear people refer to natives as weedy.” Randee shared his opinion recently with a group of people who are working on  a native plant marketing partnership. There may be some non-natives that are beautiful, too,” Randee said, …

Spring Ephemerals: Catch ’em While You Can

April 7, 2014 |

April is perhaps the very best month in Virginia to catch a sight of these extraordinary flowers that grace the landscape for such a brief time. To be ephemeral is to be short-lived, fleeting, brief. Bluebells, merrybells, Dutchman’s breeches, squirrel corn, trilliums, lady slipper orchids, bloodroot, hepatica, trout lily, twinleaf and toothwort; even their names…

The Flora of Virginia Project Gets Noticed!

April 1, 2014 |

The Flora of Virginia Project continues its upward trajectory with recent coverage by both press and radio of the opening of its truly grand exhibition in the Library of Virginia in March. Members of the Virginia Native Plant Society can take justifiable pride in the fact that we generously helped to fund first the book,…

New Book: Wildflowers and Grasses of Virginia’s Coastal Plain

March 7, 2014 |

Here is a new book you will want to have as Virginia’s spring bursts forth and you are out in the field with “need to know” questions! Specifically designed to be easy to use,  flowers are grouped  by color and quickly located with color-coordinated tabs at the top of each page. Grasses have their own…

DCR Natural Heritage Budget Not Approved

February 28, 2014 |

I am very sorry to report that despite a good effort on the part of the VNPS leadership and many of its members who wrote to their Delegates and Senators, the budget amendment to add $900,000 and seven full time staff for DCR’s Natural Heritage Program failed. There was no explicit vote, just an absence…

Get the Flora of Virginia into an Exhibition

December 1, 2013 |

Let’s get the Flora of Virginia into an exhibition at the Library of Virginia! The Flora, a result of many years of fundraising and research, published a this time last year, has already become an invaluable resource for botanists at every level of interest. An amazing exhibit is planned for an extended time, from March…