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One of the only goldenrods to tolerate shade -an excellent selection for a wooded area. Popular with the pollinators.
This is a woodland goldenrod that is very shade tolerant! This late season bloomer is a pollinator magnet with its spikes of small bright yellow flowers.
A short compact golden rod made for even the smallest of gardens! A wonderful late-season pollinator plant that won't overtake the garden. Beautiful yellow arching blooms are unmistakable.
Awesome plant for bees and butteflies! Small golden yellow blooms on thin leafed foliage. A fragrant plant that is known for smelling like anise when the leaves are crushed.
A graceful plant with thin hair like green foliage that produces fragrant airy flower panicles in late summer. The flowers are a light tan color that will eventually turn to seed for the birds to enjoy.
This is a native poppy that thrives in woodland settings. Grows to 12-18" tall. The ideal location has sun in the spring and then shaded through the rest of the summer.
A late flowering deep purple semi double flowers that attract pollinators. 'Purple Dome' has a more compact habit compared to other Asters standing at 18-24 inches tall. It maintains a nice mounded habit to fit in any garden.
Now officially know as Symphyotrichum novae-angliae but we are still calling it an aster, its so much easier to say. Great for naturalizing and for rain gardens. Grows to 3-6' tall in full sun.
Asters bring one final show to the garden before winter. These asters grow to a medium height with showy pink flowers. They excellent food for both pollinators and birds trying to stock up before winter!
Mt Cuba Center says: "one of our most reliable native perennial asters. It has a strikingly beautiful mounded appearance with masses of violet-blue, daisy-like flowers on 2-3’ tall multi-stemmed plants in mid to late autumn" Grows 24-36" Height
A tall native perennial typically found in wet prairies. Produces white and yellow tassel like flowers on purple stems with interesting compound foliage. Great for meadows, borders, or as a background plant.
A stunning spring blooming wildflower that is a sign that spring is here! A single "stem" with 3 petaled maroon flowers framed by 3 large green bracts below. You'll see these bloom in April-May in woodland setting with high organic matter.
Typically found in woodland areas this is a spring blooming wildflower that produces 3 yellow petals and 3 narrow green sepals framed by large mottled leaf like bracts.
An early blooming perennial wildflower that is often one of the first to emerge in spring. Drooping yellow flowers emerge from upright vase shaped foliage that is bright green.
Native to woodland areas this spring blooming perennial produces pale yellow bell shaped flowers. The flowers nod toward the ground with their long petals.
The flower spikes on this native perennial can be 9" long! the plants can grow 3-7' tall in full sun but can handle some shade, Can handle some wet conditions.
Not your average violet! A beautiful flush of spring bicolored flowers of dark purple and lilac. You will get a heavy bloom in spring but will typically see sporadic blooming till frost.
Getting its name from the deeply lobed foliage that resembles a birds foot this little violet makes a great ground cover in the garden. Producing light blue to lavender flowers with contrasting orange anthers in the spring.
A slow spreading fern that is named for its rounded ends. Light green in color this fern provides texture to woodland gardens.