"New" Heirloom Plants

Showing 17–24 of 62 results

  • Dracocephalum rupestre in China mao jian cao Z 4-8

    True deep blue, hooded flowers rise above heart-shaped, crinkled foliage in the heat of mid-summer

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    $9.75/bareroot

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    True deep blue, hooded flowers rise above heart-shaped, crinkled foliage in the heat of mid-summer

    Size: 12’ X 12”
    Care: sun to part shade in well-drained to moist well-drained soil
    Native: Western China in alpine meadows and grassy slopes

    First named in the West in 1867, Journal of Botany, British and Foreign, Vol 7 p. 166.  Dracocephalum means “dragonhead” in Greek.  Chinese made a tea from this.

  • Dryas drummondii Drummond’s mountain avens, Yellow mountain avens Z 3-9

    Mat of leathery, wrinkled, creeping foliage, glossy green turning bronze in fall, oval with rounded teeth. From May through July leafless, erect flower stems rise 4-8” above the ground-hugging leaves, with nodding 8 to 10 buttercup yellow petals emerging from a fuzzy, decorative cup.

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    OUT OF STOCK

    Mat of leathery, wrinkled, creeping foliage, glossy green turning bronze in fall, oval with rounded teeth. From May through July leafless, erect flower stems rise 4-8” above the ground-hugging leaves, with nodding 8 to 10 buttercup yellow petals emerging from a fuzzy, decorative cup.

    Size: 6-10” x 12-24”
    Care: sun in well-drained soil. Drought tolerant
    Native: Alaska south to Washington east to Montana, most of Canada

    1st collected in seed by Sir John Richardson (1787-1865) Scottish naturalist on Franklin’s 1st overland expedition to the Arctic coast, 1819-1822. Franklin called the expedition “disastrous” but went again.   Both Richardson and Thomas Drummond (1793-1835) collected this in seed and flower on Franklin’s 2nd overland expedition to the Arctic coast. (1825-1826) It is named to honor Thomas Drummond at Richardson’s request.  Curtis’s Botanical Magazine v. 57 ser. 2 (1830). Richardson then led a 3rd expedition searching for Franklin’s last Arctic expedition, finding no trace of the lost ships or men.

  • Erythronium americanum Yellow trout lily, Dog’s tooth violet Z 3-9

    Downfacing yellow lily-like recurved flowers in spring above mottled foliage.  Tops of petals slightly tan Grows from deep rootstock or corm, 3-5” deep.  In time it spreads from offshoots of the corm, resulting in colonies of trout lilies. Ephemeral – dies back in summer.

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    OUT OF STOCK – Only available for purchase in spring.

    Downfacing yellow lily-like recurved flowers in spring above mottled foliage.  Tops of petals slightly tan Grows from deep rootstock or corm, 3-5” deep.  In time it spreads from offshoots of the corm, resulting in colonies of trout lilies. Ephemeral – dies back in summer.

    Size: 3-6” x 4”
    Care: part to full shade in moist soil
    Native: Eastern No. America, Wisconsin

    Cherokee warmed crushed leaves & poured the juice over wounds.  According to Cherokee Yellow trout lily also remedied fever, fainting & removed slivers.  Used by Iroquois as birth control for young women and to make fish bite (by chewing the root & spitting into the river.)  In garden cultivation since 1665. Named Dog’s tooth because the white, oblong, fleshy root is shaped like a dog’s tooth.

  • Gaura lindheimeri syn. Oenothera lindheimeri White gaura, Beeblossom Z 5-9

    Multitudes of small white/pink. 4-petaled blossoms on wiry stems from May to October. Cut back by half in July to increase blossoms, as though the hoards are not enough.

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    Multitudes of small white/pink. 4-petaled blossoms on wiry stems from May to October. Cut back by half in July to increase blossoms, as though the hoards are not enough.

    Size: 36” x 36”
    Care: Full sun in well-drained to moist well-drained acidic soil
    Native: Texas and Louisiana
    Wildlife Value: deer & rabbit resistant. Source of pollen for bees, butterflies and hummingbirds
    Awards: Royal Horticultural Society Award of Merit.

    Gaura is from the Greek gauros meaning superb.  Collected in 1851 by German plant hunter Ferdinand Lindheimer (1801-1879) in the Texas Hill Country.  Lindheimer considered the Father of Texas botany.   L.H. Bailey (1913) wrote:  “The best kind is Gaura lindheimeri which has white flowers of singular appearance, with rosy calyx tubes.”

  • Gentiana cruciata Cross-leaf gentian Z 4-9

    Reputed the easiest Gentian, its true-blue clusters of short trumpet flowers grow from leaf axils of upper stems, from August through September. Lance-shaped, leathery leaves crowd below and cross one another as its name describes.

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    Reputed the easiest Gentian, its true-blue clusters of short trumpet flowers grow from leaf axils of upper stems, from August through September. Lance-shaped, leathery leaves crowd below and cross one another as its name describes.

    Size: 8-16” x 12-16”
    Care: sun to part shade in moist or moist well-drained soil.
    Native: much of Europe and East Asia
    Wildlife Value: Attracts hummingbirds, butterflies and other insects. Rabbit resistant

    In mid-1700’s it was said to grow “. . .in Pannoniae, (province of the Roman Empire bounded on the north and east by the Danube) and Apenninorum, (probably about the Apennines Mountain range of Italy) and Helvetia.” (Switzerland). Linnaeus, Species Plantarum 1: 231. 1753. (1 May 1753) Known more than 600 years ago, possibly before. Leonard Fuchs, German doctor and botanist, (1501-1566) named and described it.  Renamed to its current name by botanist Caspari Bauhin (1560-1625) in Pinax Theatricum

  • Goniolimon speciosum syn. Statice speciosa, Limonium Dwarf Statice Z 3-9

    Evergreen, flat, agave-like blue-green rosette of leaves.  In mid-summer light pink, flat-topped flower clusters held on leafless stems 10-12” above foliage. Very different, fun and easy to grow.

    $10.25/pot

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    Evergreen, flat, agave-like blue-green rosette of leaves.  In mid-summer light pink, flat-topped flower clusters held on leafless stems 10-12” above foliage. Very different, fun and easy to grow.

    Size: 10-12’ X 8”
    Care: sun in well-drained soil
    Native: Steppes of Eurasia: Russia, Siberia, Mongolia & western China

    Collected by German naturalist Johann Georg Gmelin (1709-1755)1st described in 1753 then named and renamed several times.  Pictured in Curtis’s Botanical Magazine 18. No. 656 1803.

  • Hemerocallis ‘Baby Cheeks’

    Ruffled margins encircle its broad recurve petals, the color of baby’s cheeks setting off a primrose yellow throat.

    $9.95/bareroot

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    Tetraploid daylily. Our own hybrid. Flowers in July.
    Ruffled margins encircle its broad recurve petals, the color of baby’s cheeks setting off a primrose yellow throat.

    Size: 20-30” tall
    Care: Full sun

    Our own hybrid

  • Hemerocallis ‘Orange Taffy’

    Broad coral petals with sunshine throat and ruffled petal edges.

    $9.95/bareroot

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    Tetraploid daylily. Our own hybrid. Flowers in July.
    Broad coral petals with sunshine throat and ruffled petal edges.

    Size: 20-30” tall
    Care: Full sun

    Our own hybrid