Our Plants

Showing 241–248 of 584 results

  • Geranium richardsonii Richardson’s geranium Z 3-9

    White, saucer-shaped flowers with purple veins flowering in spring to early summer

    $13.25/bareroot

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    White, saucer-shaped flowers with purple veins flowering in spring to early summer

    Size: 18” x 18”
    Care: part sun to shade in moist to moist well-drained soil
    Native: All western Canada south to California, Arizona and New Mexico

    Geranium is Greek meaning “crane” referring to the shape of its seed resembling the bill of a crane.   Cheyenne cured nosebleeds with this plant and Navajo considered it a “life medicine.” Collected by Scottish plant hunter Thomas Drummond (1780-1835) in the Canadian Rockies.  Drummond collected on the Franklin Expedition in Canada, then in Colorado and Texas before dying mysteriously in Cuba.

  • Geranium sanguineum var. lancastriense syn var. striatum Bloody Cranesbill Z 5-8

    Pale pink saucer-shaped flowers with five petals and darker veins on mound of small leaves in May-June.  Leaves turn red in fall.  

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    OUT OF STOCK

    Pale pink saucer-shaped flowers with five petals and darker veins on mound of small leaves in May-June.  Leaves turn red in fall.

     

    Size: 8" x12"
    Care: sun to part shade, moist well-drained soil.
    Native: Walney Island, Cumbria England
    Wildlife Value: Bees and butterflies drink its nectar. Resists deer and rabbits

    Geranium is Greek meaning “crane” referring to the shape of its seed resembling the bill of a crane.  Sanguinium refers to the red color of the leaves in autumn. This variety discovered on Walney Island in 1732.   Walney Island, a small island off the NW coast of England in the Irish Sea, is in Lancaster County. In cultivation in the U.S. since the 1800’s.

  • Geranium wlassovianum Wlassov’s cranesbill Z 4-8

    Flowers dusky violet with white eyes, June to September, non-stop. Ornamental, lobed leaves, red in spring & fall.

    $13.25/bareroot

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    Flowers dusky violet oval petals and darker purple veins leading to white eye in center showcasing, purple stamens. Blooms June to July and sporadically through August.  Ornamental, lobed leaves, red in spring.

    Size: 24" x 24"
    Care: sun to part shade in moist to moist well-drained soil.
    Native: Siberia, Russia, Mongolia & China
    Awards: Elizabeth Carey Miller Botanic Garden, Great Plant Award.

    Geranium is Greek meaning “crane” referring to the shape of its seed resembling the bill of a crane.  This species described and named before 1822 by Frederich Ernst Ludwig von Fischer (1782-1854), German doctor, and director of Imperial Botanic Garden in St. Petersburg.

  • Geranium x ibericum – Johnson’s Blue Z 3-8

    Long blooming (July to September) if sheared back after 1st flowering, blue flowered saucers & in fall brilliant crimson foliage.

    $13.25/bareroot

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    Long blooming (July to September) if sheared back after 1st flowering, blue flowered saucers & in fall brilliant crimson foliage.

    Size: 18” x 15”
    Care: sun to part shade in moist well-drained soil
    Awards: Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit.

    Cross of G. himalayense and G. pretense bred by A.T. Johnson, schoolmaster, writer & photographer, in his garden in Conwy Valley, Wales in 1945.

  • Geum chiloensis x ‘Mrs. Bradshaw’ Z 5-9

    Arresting, double scarlet flowers on a leafless stem a foot above basil foliage, blooming from June to August, if deadheaded.

    $13.25/bareroot

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    Arresting, double scarlet flowers on a leafless stem a foot above basil foliage, blooming from June to August, if deadheaded.

    Size: 20" x 24"
    Care: Full sun in well-drained soil
    Wildlife Value: attracts bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds. Deer and rabbit resistant.
    Awards: England’s Royal Horticultural Society Award of Merit.

    The species collected by Alexander Cruickshank in So. America in 1820’s.  ‘Mrs. Bradshaw’ listed in a book published in 1910.

  • Geum triflorum Prairie smoke, Old Man’s whiskers Z 3-7

    Pale purplish-pink dangling cup-shaped flowers in spring to early summer, followed by hair-like, pink seed heads like the hair on a troll doll.

    $10.75/bareroot

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    Pale purplish-pink dangling cup-shaped flowers in spring to early summer, followed by hair-like, pink seed heads like the hair on a troll doll.

    Size: 10" x 8" but slow to grow to this width
    Care: sun in well-drained to moist well-drained soil
    Native: all of northern No. America, Wisconsin native
    Wildlife Value: attracts butterflies, bees, wasps, and moths. Resists deer and rabbits.
    Awards: Great Plants for Great Plains

    Introduced to gardens in 1609.  Many Native American medicinal uses.  Blackfeet used it to cure coughs, skin sores and wounds on people and horses, swollen eyes, canker sores, and fuzzy thinking in people. Crushed, ripe seeds made a perfume.  Okanagan-Colville women made a love potion from the roots, as well as curing vaginal yeast infections.  The Eastern Cascades of Canada brewed a medicinal tea for eye-wash, sore throats, and general aches from the plant. Sioux used it for many ailments:  sore eyes, canker sores, sore throat, perfume, wounds, and added it to mixtures of plants for smoking. Collected by Meriwether Lewis on June 12, 1806 on the Weippe Prairie, not far from the villages of the Nez Perce in Idaho.

  • Gillenia trifoliata Syn. Porteranthus trifoliata Indian physic Z 5-9

    White stars flutter as butterflies atop wire-like red stems in June. In fall foliage turns red. One of internationally known garden designer Piet Oudolf’s 100 “MUST HAVE” plants, Gardens Illustrated 94 (2013)

    $13.25/bareroot

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    White stars flutter as butterflies atop wire-like red stems in June. In fall foliage turns red. One of internationally known garden designer Piet Oudolf’s 100 “MUST HAVE” plants, Gardens Illustrated 94 (2013)

    Size: 3’ x 2’
    Care: part shade in moist well-drained soil
    Native: from Canada to Georgia
    Wildlife Value: Its nectar attracts many bee species and butterflies. Deer resistant.
    Awards: England’s Royal Horticultural Society Award of Merit and Great Plant Pick Award from Elisabeth Carey Miller Botanical Garden.

    Cherokee chewed the root to alleviate bee stings and toothaches.  Small sips of the tea relieved asthma and colds, (larger quantities lethal.) Native Americans took the dried, powdered root as a laxative.   Gillenia named for German botanist Arnold Gille (1586-1633) published by another German botanist Conrad Moench. 1st collected by Rev. John Banister who moved to colonial Virginia in 1678.  A gunman mistakenly shot and killed him while he collected plants.  Offered for sale in Bartram Garden’s 1783 Broadside, America’s 1st plant catalog.  Jefferson considered this medicinal in Notes on the State of Virginia. Grown at America’s 1st botanic garden, Elgin Botanic Garden 1811.

  • Globularia cordifolia Globe daisy, Wedge leaved globularia Z 5-9

    Dense, blue, globe-shaped umbels in spring

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    OUT OF STOCK

    Dense, blue, globe-shaped umbels in spring, mat forming, leathery, spoon-shaped leaves.

    Size: 5” x 12”
    Care: sun in well-drained soil
    Native: alpine pastures in Switzerland and Pyrenees
    Awards: Royal Horticultural Society Award of Merit.

    Collected before 1753.  “The most desirable (Globularia) for the rockwork is the neat G. cordifolia which is a little prostrate trailing shrub with bluish flowers.” William Robinson 1879.