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  2. Jul 19, 2023 · While many plants make a tasty meal for roaming deer, you can avoid damage by choosing plants that deer are not likely to eat. Deer-resistant plants are usually those that are fragrant, have a course or fuzzy texture, or are toxic to them.

    • Coneflower

      Flowers can grow large at 4 to 6 inches in diameter. This...

    • YARROW. ‘Firefly Sunshine’ Achillea. Light up your summer garden with these brightly colored flowers in yellow, pink, white or peach. Yarrow is an easy perennial to grow and a good choice for beginners.
    • ORNAMENTAL ONION. ‘Serendipity’ Allium. Not everyone enjoys eating onions, and that includes deer and rabbits too. They'll avoid 'Serendipity', an ornamental onion with playful purple, ball-shaped flowers that bloom from mid to late summer.
    • ANISE HYSSOP. Meant to Bee 'Queen Nectarine' Agastache hybrid. Anise hyssop has fragrant leaves that release a pleasant scent when touched. You'll love the smell, but deer won't!
    • BEE BALM. LEADING LADY, UPSCALE and PARDON MY Monarda. These colorful perennials attract bees, butterflies and hummingbirds. But deer will steer clear once they catch a whiff of their minty foliage.
  3. Which Plants Deer Don’t Want to Eat. Not surprisingly, deer tend to stay away from poisonous plants. Daffodils, foxgloves, and poppies are common flowers that deer avoid. Deer also tend to turn their noses up at fragrant plants with strong scents.

    • Astilbe. Astilbe, also known as False Goat’s Beard, have beautiful foliage and deer tend to steer clear. The flowers fall into the “fuzzy or dry” category.
    • Hawthorn. Hawthorns (Crataegus spp.) are small trees with attractive white blossoms and edible fruit. There are some thornless varieties, but most sport one-inch long thorns from the trunk and branches.
    • Foxglove. Foxglove (Digitalis spp.) has showy, tubular, often speckled blooms. Several cultivars exist, in a wide range of colors. Most foxgloves are short-lived biennials that may reseed themselves.
    • Monkshood. Monkshood (Aconitum napellus) is an attractive herbaceous perennial with dark purple blooms shaped like a monk’s cowl. The deadly poison from monkshood was used in ancient Greece and Rome on the tips of weapons such as javelins and darts.
    • 15 Annual Flowers Resistant to Deer. As a rule, deer will avoid plants with a pungent smell and those with hairy or fuzzy leaves. Of course, they’ll also steer clear of plants that are poisonous to them.
    • Alyssum. Zones: 5 to 9. Also called carpet flower, alyssum needs full sun and thrives in areas where the temperature stays on the cool side. If your region is warm, your alyssum will need some shade during the hottest part of the day.
    • California Poppy (Eschscholzia californica): Zones: 3 through 9. California poppies are most commonly found in golden orange, although they’re also available in various other shades of orange as well as pink, scarlet, and white.
    • Cleome (Cleome hassleriana): Zones: 2 to 11. Cleome also goes by the name “spider flower,” and it’s easy to see why. The blooms clustered at the top of the stem are accompanied by long, spidery tendrils that stick straight out.
  4. 30 Best Deer-Resistant Flowers and Plants for Your Garden. Prevent Deer from Eating your Plants and Flowers. What are Deer? Deer are a group of mammals that belong to the family Cervidae. They are known for their distinctive antlers, which are grown and shed annually by males (bucks) for mating purposes.

  5. May 7, 2024 · Flowers like corydalis are not only appealing because of their lovely fern-like foliage and long blooming periods but also because deer tend to avoid them. It’s worthwhile to incorporate such deer-resistant flowering plants to maintain a thriving garden.

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