41. Sam Hoadley on Native Plant Trials at Mt. Cuba Center

Sam Hoadley BIO

Sam Hoadley is the Manager of Horticultural Research at Mt. Cuba Center where he evaluates native plant species, old and new cultivars, and hybrids in the Trial Garden. Sam earned his degree in Sustainable Landscape Horticulture from the University of Vermont. You can learn more about Sam and Mt. Cuba’s Center by visiting their website to access resources including free downloadable reports, sortable plant spreadsheets, and educational classes.

SHOW NOTES

  • Sam shared how his early connection to plants began in childhood through woodland exploration and freedom in the home garden

  • His education in sustainable landscape horticulture at the University of Vermont and formative internship at Longwood Gardens

  • How Longwood Gardens exposed him to a wide range of gardening styles, from formal to naturalistic, and the value of learning landscape management at scale

  • Shares his first impressions of Mt. Cuba Center’s high maintenance standards and its transition from private estate to public garden

  • The history of the Copeland family and how the Copelands evolved from general gardening to a strong focus on native plants and conservation

  • Mt. Cuba’s mission to inspire conservation through the beauty and value of native plants

  • Dr. Richard Lighty’s role in helping Mrs. Copeland define her passion for wildflowers and shape the public garden’s direction

  • The goals of the trial garden at Mt. Cuba to evaluate plant performance and wildlife value, primarily for the Mid-Atlantic

  • How the trial garden helps gardeners and nurseries make informed decisions about native plant use

  • The importance of context in plant performance and the need to interpret results for different site conditions

  • How unexpected demand for top trial performers like Carex woodii (Wood’s sedge) taught the team to proactively engage with nurseries

  • How Mt. Cuba’s annual trial report releases have become highly anticipated by horticulturists

  • Sam’s first trial report on Helenium (sneezeweed) and the challenges of synthesizing data for plants no longer alive in the trial

  • How trial writing becomes easier and more rewarding with extended plant exposure and personal enthusiasm

  • The value of providing accessible botany and morphology education in the research reports

  • Mt. Cuba’s goal of sparking curiosity and offering entry points for all levels of horticulturists

  • Key planning strategies for running a successful trial garden, including multi-year timelines and goal setting

  • Market analysis for commercially available plants and spotlighting underused natives

  • Mt. Cuba’s organizational commitment of space and staff time to long-term trials

  • The four-year herbaceous perennial trial model—including establishment period; data collection with weekly evaluation methods of measurements, ratings, standardized performance scores; how trial scores are averaged and weighted; and differences between perennial and woody plant evaluations

  • How using Survey123 transformed their data collection process and improved efficiency

  • The strategy for maintaining rating consistency by limiting data collectors and training interns

  • Discusses the critical role volunteers play in supporting pollinator observations and garden maintenance

  • The early signs of spread in the Pycnanthemum trial and how they interpret vigor across cultivars

  • Insights from the Solidago trial that will be published in January 2026

  • Future trial reports on ferns, Asclepias, oakleaf hydrangeas, and a new bluestem grass trial

  • Invites public garden visitors to observe trials firsthand and spot top performers in real time and how standout trial plants are usually visually obvious and align with high ratings

  • The small Physostegia trial, including wild-collected Gulf Coast species and cultivar comparisons and how Physostegia performs well even under intense summer heat and offers valuable habitat

  • Rapid-fire lessons from past trial reports

  • Helenium selections from Europe often perform poorly long-term compared to native species

  • Echinacea showed clear pollinator preference for straight species over double-flowered hybrids

  • Hydrangea arborescens can tolerate full sun and how pink-flowered forms outperform whites in sunnier conditions

  • Learning Carex (sedge) is a highly adaptable genus with major landscape potential and commercial nursery interest

  • Mowing Carex (sedge) can rejuvenate its appearance mid-season, especially post-bloom

  • The 10-year Amsonia trial showed species are long-lived, deer-resistant, and consistently high-performing across the board; however, ‘Blue Ice’ Amsonia was found to be synonymous with a European species, not native as often assumed

  • The Vernonia trial highlighted the genus’s size diversity and ornamental potential, including 15-ft plants like 'Jonesboro Giant'

  • Encouraging home gardeners to set up mini trial gardens, especially for observing pollinator activity

  • Distributed trials across different ecologies could expand understanding of native plant performance

  • Explaining cultivar diversity and how some selections retain high ecological value

  • A framework for understanding where cultivars are appropriate including formal gardens, naturalistic gardens, and restorations

  • Sam advocated for inclusion and nuance in the native plant conversation and to support conservation by addition, warned against oversimplified messaging around cultivars, and advocated for transparency about plant origin and traits

  • Mt. Cuba’s role in interpreting the ecological trade-offs of different plant forms

  • How comparing multiple accessions of the same species adds insight into plant origin and genetics

  • How cultivar names can sometimes provide more transparency about origin than “wild-type” labels

  • Sam’s practice of visiting gardens and natural areas to fuel creative thinking and garden inspiration

  • Sowing Beauty by James Hitchmough as a recent favorite for its seed-based design insights

  • The best way to propagate more horticulturists is to expose kids early to nature and gardens

  • You can learn more about Sam and Mt. Cuba’s Center by visiting their website to access resources including free downloadable reports, sortable plant spreadsheets, and educational classes.