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From Proven Winners: Small, refined columnar evergreen. Smaller than its sister Sky Pointer®, Patti O Box® has smaller, darker leaves and glossier foliage. Much darker than typical I. crenata, this petite evergreen is perfectly scaled for smaller ga
Great subsitute for a boxwood! Cultivar of our native evergreen shrub. Very compact and full.
A compact rounded form of our native inkberry holly. Good for rain gardens and hedges. Should stay fuller around the bottom than the straight species Inkberry. Grows to 3-4'
We are very excited to have this plant- the male inkberry! When planted near popular female cultivars of Inkberry it will pollinate the flowers and allow your shrubs to get berries. It reaches a mature height of 4-6' with a vertical shape.
Native alternative to boxwood. Love boxwood but struggle with disease or winter damage? Plant Strongbox® inkberry holly instead.
'Apollo' is the male pollinator for 'Sparkleberry'. Grows 10-12 feet tall and has an abundance of small white flowers in later spring.
One of the best natives for a moist location, this is also highly recommended by birds! Small flowers turn into beautiful red berries. You will need to plant a male to pollinate female for berries.
Winterberry is known for its red fruits that persist through winter 'Sparkleberry' will provide you with copious amounts of the beautiful fruit! A slow growing shrub that does well in wetter areas, great option for rain gardens.
From Proven Winners:Heavy berry production for brilliant winter color! Berry Heavy® winterberry produces copious amounts of bright red berries that really shine in the fall and winter landscape. It is a deciduous holly, which means it loses its leaves
Really nice spiked white blooms in early summer pop out from handsome dark green foliage. The lightly scented flowers are not only nice for you but also attract bees and butterflies.
Tons of color on this four-season shrub! Spring brings dark green foliage, summer gifts you fragrant spiked white flowers, fall brings fantastic deep red color, and finally in winter the stems change from green to red.
From Proven Winners: Sweet summertime fragrance. We sniffed dozens of different sweetspires in pursuit of the most fragrant variety, and we can say with confidence that we've found it in Scentlandia® itea. Though this native plant is much beloved f
Yes, indeed! Tortuga juniper is simply one of the toughest evergreens we offer. Simply plant this handsome native juniper in a sunny, well-drained spot and watch it beautify your yard all year long. It naturally grows as a low-mounded groundcover.
Don't miss out on all the beauty that beauty bush as to offer! Jolene Jolene is a smaller version of this lovely flowering shrub.
This woodland ground cover produces white flowers in spring that eventually transition into red berries that stick around through winter. A great way to add winter interest into shade gardens. Foliage is a glossy dark green with each leaf being small and
This wonderful shrub is native to Eastern North America and produces waxy white berries that are commonly used to make candles and soap. A favorite among birds as well! In addition to birds this is also a larval host plant for the Columbia silkmoth!
From Proven winners: Spring to autumn color, without lifting a finger! Ginger Wine® ninebark expands the color palette for these easy care, native flowering shrubs. Spring foliage emerges a sunny orange color and matures to sparkling burgundy. Clust
Common ninebark is a great tough large shrub that can grow in harsh conditions. Works well to stabilize streambanks. Grows to 5-8 feet tall and 4-6 feet wide in full to part sun
One of the darkest foliaged ninebarks out there. Add extreme contrast with white spring flowers. Graceful arching branches makes for a nice specimen or mass planting.
A large evergreen shrub with lots and lots of pink flowers in the spring. Good for shadier locations.
This is an excellent rhododendron for the home garden! This evergreen stuns in spring with bright pink/lavender flowers. Rich green evergreen during the season turns a handsome burgundy in fall and remains that way through winter, gives this plant year ro
This native shrub will form a thicket about 4' tall and can tolerate a wide array of conditions except poorly drained soils. The fall color is a terrific! Shades or red, orange and even purple. The foliage is somewhat similar to its cousin Rhus radicans,
A small native shrub that produces edible black berries in the summer. Yellow bell-shaped flowers bloom in clusters in early spring. This species does not have thorns and does not sucker so no need to worry about it getting out of control!