Echinacea p. 'PowWow Wild Berry' is a herbaceous perennial with a clumping habit, popular for its vibrant, berry-purple blooms. It thrives in USDA hardiness zones 3 to 9, making it versatile for a range of climates. This coneflower prefers full...
Lacy light green foliage contrasts nicely with the showy burgundy stems. Cut back in late winter to allow for new fronds. Does not tolerate clay soils well.
Delicately long fronds unfurl a golden green and mature to a deep green. Fronds have crested leaflets that give it a frilly appearance. Adds lots of texture to any shade garden.
This evergreen fern boasts a robust, arching habit with sword-shaped fronds, creating a lush and structured appearance. Recommended for USDA hardiness zones 3 to 8, it thrives in cool to mild temperatures and partial to full shade conditions. It requires...
Upright branching, deciduous tree has a narrow, oval crown. Makes a great accent, shade or street tree. Medium green, narrow, pointed foliage turns yellow in fall. Fertile, well-drained, moist soil
Medium ruby red apple with a non-browning white flesh. Sweet flavor with a slight tartness. Similar to a Macintosh apple. Excellent for fresh eating, cooking, and cider. Needs a pollinator.
Vigorous spreading tree. Large fruit has yellow or greenish yellow skin with red stripes. Unexcelled for cooking. Firm white flesh. Good eating or cooking. Ripens in August. Makes good pies, desserts, sauces and cider. Requires pollinator.
Vigorous spreading tree. Large fruit has yellow or greenish yellow skin with red stripes. Unexcelled for cooking. Firm white flesh. Good eating or cooking. Ripens in August. Makes good pies, desserts, sauces and cider. Requires pollinator.
Vigorous spreading tree. Large fruit has yellow or greenish yellow skin with red stripes. Unexcelled for cooking. Firm white flesh. Good eating or cooking. Ripens in August. Makes good pies, desserts, sauces and cider. Requires pollinator.
A cross between McIntosh and Newtown apples. An excellent all-purpose apple with crisp, snowy-white flesh. The Spartan has a distinctive sweet flavor with a wine-like quality. Sweet flavor intensifies with storage.
Large, brightly striped red fruit. Snappy, crisp, exceptionally juicy, yellowish green flesh. Fine, rich, agreeably aromatic flavor. Good for eating and sauce. Ripens from August to early September depending on location.
A softer palette in warm tones of apricot with golden yellow tips surrounding a central cone of amber, gold and green. Nicely mounding foliage is tightly compact on 12” plants, providing the perfect backdrop for the blanket of 3” prolific...
Gaillardia 'Arizona Sun' is a stunning perennial recognized for its vibrant bicolored blooms, presenting a striking display of bright red petals with golden-yellow tips. This compact, bushy plant features a well-branched habit, making it ideal for borders, rock gardens, and...
This compact, clump-forming perennial showcases a mounded habit, making it ideal for sunny borders or containers. Hardy in USDA zones 3-9, it thrives in temperatures ranging from mild cool summers to warm climates. Its daisy-like flowers feature vibrant copper-orange petals...
Creeping, evergreen groundcover. Dark green leaves have a strong wintergreen fragrance when crushed. Pinkish white flowers in summer, followed by red fruit in late fall to early winter.
Slow growing, symmetricall upright branching deciduous tree, becoming broad with age. Height to about 35 to 50 feet. High and wide. Hardy to about -40 degrees F. Full sun. Uynique green fan-shaped foiliage turns golden-yellow in fall. Non fruiting st
Fast growing,when young, rounded deciduous tree to about 35 feet high and wide. Hardy to about -30 degrees F. Full sun. Fine textured medium green leaves turn yellow in the fall.
Fast growing, vase shaped to rectangular, deciduous tree to about 35 to 40 feet high. Hardy to about -30 degrees F. Full sun. Fine textured medium green leaves, changing to golden yellow in fall. Thornless and essentially fruitless.
Wetland perennial grass with light yellowish green grassilike foliage. Sprays of spiky golden yellow flower heads look like bushy fox-tails. The tiny flowers bloom from mid spring to mid summer. This PNW native thrives in wet soils.
This compact, clump-forming ornamental grass features slender, upright, and sword-like dark green foliage that adds a striking vertical element to gardens or wetland areas. Hardy in zones 4-9, it thrives in cooler climates with recommended temperatures ranging from 60°F to...
Stiff, upright bright green stems mature to a silver blue. Remains erect and will not flop over. Turns a showy red orange color in fall. Steel blue plumes in fall will mature to a strawberry blond. Drought tolerant once established.
Upright, spreads by rhizomes. Five to eleven flat, grass like leaves sprout from the base and along the stem. Inflorescence is a panicle of many clusters of spikelets and leaf like bracts on the ends of several branched stems.
Rhjizomatous, spreading, dense upright colonies with flat swordlike thick leaves. Mature female brown to blackish brown spike to about 10 feet high. Plant in water to 12". Male and female flowers on same plant. Native to wetlands and marshes.
An attractive groundcover for the shade with light green and white variegated leaves. Usually grown for its foliage. Excellent for that area where nothing else will grow. It can be invasive, but if it's planted in the right spot, it...
Mat-forming, compact/spreading. Dark maroon-purple leaves with scalloped margins. Fragrant dark violet flowers. Prefers moist, humusy soils with good drainage.
Vigorous, mat-forming groundcover has white, pink, rose and green foliage. Makes an ideal groundcover in areas where a lawn is not needed. Produces dainty, dark blue, 6" flower spikes in late spring. Hardy to -10* F. Well-drained soil