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  • Rosa rubrifolia syn. Rosa glauca Z 3-9

    Medium pink single blooms in spring. Purplish foliage bearing red-purple hips in autumn.

    $17.95/ONLY AVAILABLE ON SITE @ NURSERY

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    Medium pink single blooms in spring. Purplish foliage bearing red-purple hips in autumn.

    Size: 7’ x 5’
    Care: Full sun to part shade in moist well-drained soil. Disease resistant. Japanese beetles seem not to be interested in this rose.
    Native: Central Europe
    Awards: Plant Select; Elisabeth Carey Miller Botanical Garden Great Plant Pick & Great Plants for Great Plains; Royal Botanical Society Award of Garden Merit

    In garden cultivation since 1830

    **LISTED AS OUT OF STOCK BECAUSE WE DO NOT SHIP THIS ITEM.  IT IS AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE AT OUR RETAIL LOCATION.

  • Rubus odoratus Flowering raspberry Z 2-8

    Purple-pink saucer shaped flowers all summer

    $16.95/bareroot

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    Purple-pink saucer shaped flowers from June to October.  Rarely seen shrub.

    Size: 7-8' x 8' spreading
    Care: Sun to shade in moist well-drained soil. Slightly acidic.
    Native: Maine to Michigan, south to Illinois, Tennessee, east to North Carolina and all places in between
    Wildlife Value: Immune to walnut toxins.

    For sale in an English catalog in 1730. William Robinson, father of the mixed perennial garden, praised the flowering raspberry as bearing  “large clusters of rich purple flowers. Bearing scented leaves, the leaves and not the flowers being fragrant.”

  • Rudbeckia fulgida Black eyed susan Z 4-9

    The classic Black-eyed susan, 2-3" wide yellow daisies with a dark center from July-October

    $13.25/bareroot

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    The classic Black-eyed susan, 2-3″ wide yellow daisies with a dark center from July – October

    Size: 30" x 18"
    Care: full sun to part shade in moist well-drained to well-drained soil
    Native: East and Southeastern U.S.
    Wildlife Value: A great number of bees, flies and beetles collect pollen or drink nectar from this Rudbeckia

    Cherokee ate the stems and leaves and used this species to remedy earaches, sores, flux, venereal disease, snakebites, dropsy, and swelling.  Iroquois healed the heart and rid children of worms with this, Potawatomi make a brown dye with this.  This species fulgida was introduced to England in 1760 and named in William Aition’s Hortus Kewensis, V. 3 p. 251 (1789).    

  • Rudbeckia laciniata ‘Herbstsonne’ Rudbeckia nitida ‘Herbstsonne’ syn. Rudbeckia ‘Autumn Sun’ Z 5-10

    Exceptionally large & drooping petals, with a tall, central cone of green, blooms July to September.

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    ARCHIVED

    Note: This is a plant not currently for sale.  This is an archive page preserved for informational use.

    Exceptionally large & drooping petals, with a tall, central cone of green, blooms July to September.

    Size: 4-7’ x 2-3’
    Care: sun to part shade in moist well-drained soil
    Wildlife Value: provides butterfly nectar and seeds food for birds
    Awards: Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit

    It’s “an old selection.”

  • Rudbeckia laciniata var. hortensia Golden Glow Z 3-9

    Imposing double daisies with multiple petals bloom atop a 6 or 7 foot erect stem as thick as a small tree trunk  reign over neighboring flowers like a king. “Rich, yellow double flowers borne in autumn, excellent for cutting, “Sanders 1913.  Blooms July-August.

    $13.95/bareroot

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    Imposing double daisies with multiple petals bloom atop a 6 or 7 foot erect stem as thick as a small tree trunk  reign over neighboring flowers like a king. “Rich, yellow double flowers borne in autumn, excellent for cutting, “Sanders 1913.  Blooms July-August.

     

    Size: 5-7' x 12" and spreading
    Care: sun in moist well-drained to well drained soil, drought tolerant
    Wildlife Value: Immune to Walnut toxins

    Serendipitous discovery in a group of seedlings in 1894. Said to be “the most popular hardy perennial introduced during the last 25 years,” April, 1905, The Garden magazine. Recommended by Gertrude Jekyll in 1908. Beth in New Mexico advised that her alpaca named Ricardo finds them delicious.

  • Rudbeckia maxima Great coneflower Z 4-9

    Magnificent wildflower with huge paddle-shaped leaves of blue-grey-green and tall stalks of finch-gold petals

    $13.25/bareroot

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    Magnificent wildflower with huge paddle-shaped leaves of blue-grey-green and tall stalks of finch-gold petals encircling central cones 4-5″ tall.

    Size: 5-6' x 2'
    Care: Sun in moist to moist well-drained soil
    Native: OK, AK, TX & LA
    Wildlife Value: Nectar source for larvae of painted Lady butterfly & for large Wood nymph butterfly.

    Rudbeckia was named by Linnaeus for his University of Upsala professor, Olaf Rudbeck.  Rudbeck made the surprising claim “that the Paradise of Scripture was situated somewhere in Sweden.”   C.F. Leyel.  This species collected by Englishman Thomas Nuttall (1786-1859) in Oklahoma Territory near the Red River in 1816.  Nuttall searched much of the No. American continent from New England west to Oregon, the South, Midwest, the Plains, S.E., California & Hawaii, finding thousands of new plants.

  • Rudbeckia subtomentosa ‘Henry Eilers’ Z 4-8

    These Rudbeckias tower above basal leaves on rigid, branching  stems forming clumps of sun  yellow petaled flowers surrounding a raised, brown dome of disc flowers.  But instead of flat petals, the petals are rolled into narrow tubes, looking like many spokes of a wheel blooming from mid-summer into fall.

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    These Rudbeckias tower above basal leaves on rigid, branching  stems forming clumps of sun  yellow petaled flowers surrounding a raised, brown dome of disc flowers.  But instead of flat petals, the petals are rolled into narrow tubes, looking like many spokes of a wheel blooming from mid-summer into fall.

    Size: 3-5’ x 1-2’
    Care: sun in moist well-drained soil
    Wildlife Value: attracts butterflies, deer resistant

    Henry Eilers discovered this cultivar while scouting a southern Illinois prairie.  Here is his story.
    Henry Eilers, born in 1934, long-time nurseryman, had introduced selections of different ornamental plants that he found growing at his nursery. But Rudbeckia subtomentosa ‘Henry Eilers’ is different.  Henry worked tirelessly for decades to preserve Illinois plants and their diversity.  In the early 1980’s while scouting a prairie remnant near Witt in Montgomery County IL he spied a small clump of uncommon Black-eyed susan.  Instead of the usual broad, flat petals, this one has narrow, quilled petals. He dug it and replanted it at his nursery where it grew on. It still grows in his wildflower garden. He decided to name it Rudbeckia ‘Montgomery County.’    In the 1990’s Henry took it and other native wildflowers to a native plant sale at the Shaw Arboretum, Missouri Botanic Garden. He and another nurseryman, Larry Lowman exchanged a few plants, one being this Rudbeckia. Several years later he found it for sale in the Plant Delight’s Nursery catalog, renamed Rudbeckia ‘Henry Eilers.’ Over time the plant appeared in gardening magazines and mail order catalogs. It now grows in the entrance planting at the National Botanic Garden in Washington, at the Missouri Botanic Garden and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. A nurseryman from the Czech Republic told Henry he had been growing it!

  • Rudbeckia subtomentosa Sweet coneflower Z 4-8

    These Rudbeckias tower above basal leaves on rigid, branching  stems forming clumps of sun  yellow petaled flowers surrounding a raised, brown-purple dome of disc flowers.

    $13.25/bareroot

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    These Rudbeckias tower above basal leaves on rigid, branching  stems forming clumps of sun  yellow petaled flowers surrounding a raised, brown-purple dome of disc flowers.

    Size: 4-5' x 1-2'
    Care: Sun to part shade in moist to moist well-drained soil
    Native: East US, Wisconsin native.
    Wildlife Value: attracts butterflies, deer resistant

    Rudbeckia was named by Linnaeus for his University of Upsala professor, Olaf Rudbeck.  Rudbeck made the surprising claim “that the Paradise of Scripture was situated somewhere in Sweden.” C.F. Level. This species described in 1815.  May have been collected by English planthunter John Bradbury (1768-1823).