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Showing 177–184 of 612 results

  • Delphinium exaltatum Tall Larkspur, American larkspur Z 4-8

    Graceful, lavender or purple spikes of trumpets on tall stems in July to August.

    $12.75/bareroot

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    Graceful, lavender or purple spikes of trumpets on tall stems in July to August.

    Size: 3-4' x 9"
    Care: Care: sun to part shade in moist well-drained soil. Withstands winds, no staking needed. Not fussy like fancy hybrids. Tougher and much longer living than modern hybrids. Let the seeds drop & you’ll get some babies.
    Native: Pennsylvania to No. Carolina west to Ohio & Alabama
    Wildlife Value: attract hummingbirds

    Delphinium, named by Dioscorides, is Greek for “dolphin” due to the resemblance of the flower shape.  According to Aiton, early director at Kew Royal Garden, John Bartram (1699-1777) sent it to England.  London’s Chelsea Physic gardener Philip Miller grew it in 1758. Jefferson planted this at Monticello in the NW quarter of the outer border in March 1811.

  • Delphinium tricorne Dwarf larkspur, Spring larkspur Z 4-8

    Spring ephemeral of blue delphinium elf-cap spikes. Substitute these for tulips, a favorite food of deer and rabbits

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    OUT OF STOCK – Available to order in Spring only

    Spring ephemeral of blue delphinium elf-cap spikes. Substitute these for tulips, a favorite food of deer and rabbits

    Size: 18-24” x 6-9”
    Care: sun to shade in moist well-drained to moist soil
    Native: Pennsylvania to Iowa, south to Alabama and Oklahoma and states in between
    Wildlife Value: food for hummingbirds and butterflies; deer & rabbit resistant.

    Collected by André Michaux c. 1800. Cherokee used this for heart ailments and reported that it makes cows intoxicated and they die. The name tricorne comes from the 3-cornered shape of its seeds, like the shape of colonial hats with brims turned up on three sides. This is breathtakingly beautiful but slow to grow.  It is also an ephemeral and dies back after going to seed so mark it or have a good memory where it is so you don’t dig into it planting something else. It comes back in spring.

  • Dendranthema weyrichii syn. Chrysanthemum weyrichii Alpine daisy Z 4-8

    Pink or white daisies all summer and fall

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    OUT OF STOCK

    Pink or white daisies all summer and fall. One of the best for groundcover, front of border or rock garden plant.

    Size: 6” x 18”
    Care: sun in well-drained soil. Drought tolerant.
    Native: East Asia & eastern Russia

    Collected before 1891

  • Deschampsia caespitosa Hair grass Z 4-9

    Airy pink panicles, like delicate billowing clouds of seed heads, top clumps of arching slender leaves in mid- summer persisting through winter.

    $12.95/bareroot

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    Airy pink panicles like delicate billowing clouds of seed heads, top clumps of arching slender leaves in mid-summer persisting through winter.

    Size: 2-4' x 18"
    Care: moist soil in sun to shade
    Native: Europe, Asia & No. America, Wisconsin native

    Deschampsia named for French botanist Deslongchamps (1774-1849.) Caespitosa means that it grows in clumps. This species found by mid-1700’s.

  • Desmanthus illinoensis Prairie mimosa, Illinois bundleflower Z 5-9

    This legume bears round heads of frilly white flowers that turn to interesting spherical seed pods persisting all winter.

    $12.95/bareroot

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    This legume bears round heads of frilly white flowers that turn to interesting spherical seed pods persisting all winter.

    Size: 4’ x 3’
    Care: sun in moist well-drained to dry soil. Looks like a shrub but is a perennial.
    Native: Ohio to Florida and west to New Mexico and all states in between
    Wildlife Value: Seeds are food for birds including the Ring-Necked Pheasant, Bobwhite Quail, and Greater Prairie Chicken.

    Desmanthus is Greek meaning “bundle flower” because the bunched flowers look like a bundle.  Pawnee, Sioux, Omaha & Ponca children used seed pods with dried seeds as rattles.  Pawnees relieved itching with the boiled leaves.  Sioux ate roasted seeds.  First collected by French plant hunter Michaux in the late 1700’s.

  • Dianthus amurensis syn Dianthus chinensis Amur Pink  Z 3-8

    Five jagged-edged petals on its plum-purple blossoms, not pink, as are all other “pinks", the common name for Dianthus. It also flowers later and longer than most other Dianthus, flowering most of the summer.  Its uniform purple stamens meld into the flower’s view but a thin, deep purple line encircles the center.

    $9.25/pot

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    Five jagged-edged petals on its plum-purple blossoms, not pink, as are all other “pinks”, the common name for Dianthus. It also flowers later and longer than most other Dianthus, flowering most of the summer.  Its uniform purple stamens meld into the flower’s view but a thin, deep purple line encircles the center.

    Size: 12" x 12"
    Care: Sun in well-drained soil
    Native: Amur River region

    Amurensis means from the Amur River (flows between the boundaries of China and Russia.)  Re-named, separated from Dianthus chinensis, by French nurseryman and hybridizer Henri Antoine Jacques (1782–1866), best known for his creation of the Bourbon rose, in 1861 in Journal de la Société Impériale et Centrale d’Horticulture 7: 625. 1861

  • Dianthus carthusianorum Clusterhead PinkDianthus carthusianorum Carthusian pink, Clusterhead pink Z 5-9

    Deep reddish pink flowers atop wiry stems from June until frost

    $10.25/bareroot

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    Rosy carmine pink flowers atop wiry stems from June until frost

    Size: 16" x 8"
    Care: sun in moist well-drained soil.
    Native: Central and southern Europe
    Wildlife Value: attracts hummingbirds. Deer resistant.

    The common name “pink” is from “pinct” referring to the jagged edge of the petals. The word “pink” referring to the color, came from the fact that most of the Dianthus are pink.   This species may have come into gardens with the Carthusian monks in the 1100’s.

  • Dianthus cruentus Blood pink  Z 5-9

    Small but eye-catching carmine flowers held high on a leafless stem above basal foliage.  Blooms in late spring-early summer

    $10.25/bareroot

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    Small but eye-catching carmine flowers held high on a leafless stem above basal foliage.  Blooms in late spring-early summer

    Size: 2-3’ x 6-9”
    Care: sun in moist well-drained soil
    Native: Balkans
    Wildlife Value: Attracts bees & butterflies

    First described in Spic. Fl. Rumel. 1: 186 1843.