# Coyote Brush: an Easy Native Coyote brush (Baccharis pilularis), is a very common native plant in San Diego County, and much of California. It grows as a bush with small medium-to-dark green leaves. Some varieties grow over six feet tall, and some remain relatively short. As you might expect from a common native plant, Coyote Brush is a real survivor in San Diego gardens, where the long dry summers can kill a lot of traditional garden plants. Coyote brush looks a little like boxwood, and I've had success trimming it into a formal hedge. So if you want that formal look without shelling out big bucks for constant watering, then maybe give boxwood the boot and try Coyote brush. ## Variation among varieties The wild-growing plants that I've seen tend to get tall and lose the leaves on the bottom half of the plant, so they don't make a great hedge, but there are horticultural varieties that do. My favorite, for a low hedge is the *Pozo Surf* variety. It gets to be about 3 feet tall and retains its leaves all over. It's a tough, drought-tolerant plant that's easy to care for, tolerates heavier watering (if near non-native plants, for example), and seems to handle pruning and trimming pretty well. ## A formal hedge from a native plant!? Coyote brush is fairly easy to grow from cuttings, and I've got a very long formal(ish) hedge of it in my backyard. The hedge separates the gravel walking path from the planting areas (mostly populated with other natives such as sage). I don't keep the hedge meticulously trimmed or anything, so I don't know if it holds up to that as well as boxwood does, but I'm pretty happy with it. I'd say, err on the wide side with this if you want to use a hedge. The plant will naturally want to get to about three feet tall and at least that wide, so instead of fighting it all the time, I think a two or 2.5-foot wide hedge is probably the way to go. You'll have to trim it a lot less often. Most native-plant gardeners seem to be squarely in the 'natural-looking' camp, so you'll probably never see anyone else using Coyote brush as a formal hedge. Such a thing is practically anathema to them. But I like the look. I'm the only person I know of who's tried this. ## Learn More The greatest native-plant resource I know of is the spectacular Las Pilitas Nursery site [1]. Las Pilitas used to have an Escondido location, but that closed down a few years ago. Now, I think they only have their Santa Margarita location, but in San Diego, you can buy most of the varieties that Las Pilitas offers from Moosa Creek Nursery [2]. [1] https://www.laspilitas.com [2] https://www.moosacreeknursery.com The Las Pilitas website is especially informative and was a great help in planning my garden.