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1143 plants in this collection

№ 641
Pycnanthemum tenuifolium narrowleaf mountain mint with fine needle-like foliage and white summer flower clusters
Narrow leaf Mountain Mint
Pycnanthemum tenuifoliumNarrow leaf Mountain Mint

Where blunt mountain mint is all broad silver, Pycnanthemum tenuifolium is the slender cousin, a fine-textured native built from wiry stems and narrow, almost needle-thin leaves. From midsummer into early fall the plant clouds over with flat-topped clusters of tiny white to pale lavender flowers, faintly purple-speckled, and the effect at a distance is a low haze of bloom. What the flowers lack in size they make up in draw: bees, small butterflies, wasps, and beneficial insects work the nectar in numbers that make narrowleaf mountain mint one of the most valuable pollinator plants of the eastern flora.

Hardiness
Zones 6–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
2–3 ft.
Spread
2–3 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Perennial
Traditional use
digestive health, general wellness, topical applications
$16.00In stock
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№ 642
Pyrrosia lingua 'Kei Kan' cockscomb tongue fern with thick leathery crested green fronds
Cockscomb Tongue Fern
Pyrrosia lingua 'Kei Kan'Cockscomb Tongue Fern

Pyrrosia lingua 'Kei Kan' is a fern for people who think they do not like ferns. Nothing here is lacy or feathery. The fronds are thick, leathery, and strap-shaped, and in this selection the tips fork and crest into ragged, comb-like divisions, the feature that earns the Japanese name Kei Kan, meaning cockscomb. The overall effect is closer to a piece of green leather sculpture than to the soft filigree most people picture when they hear the word fern.

Hardiness
Zones 7–10
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
10–15 in.
Spread
6–15 in.
Plant type
Fern
Traditional use
respiratory support, detoxification & cleansing
$28.00Currently unavailable
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№ 643
Quercus acerifolia maple-leaf oak with glossy maple-shaped leaves turning red in fall
Maple leaf Oak
Quercus acerifoliaMaple leaf Oak

Quercus acerifolia is one of the rarest oaks in North America, and one of the most quietly beautiful. The name says the first thing you notice: acerifolia means maple-leaved, and the upper leaves really do look like a sugar maple's, often as wide as they are long, cut into three to five sharp, glossy lobes that turn deep red and burgundy in fall. A close relative of the Shumard oak, maple-leaf oak grows as anything from a stunted, multi-trunked shrub on a windswept ridge to a single-trunked tree of forty or fifty feet in cultivation.

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
20–40 ft.
Spread
12–20 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
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№ 644
Quercus acutissima 'Gobbler'
Sawtooth Oak 'Gobbler'
Quercus acutissima 'Gobbler'Sawtooth Oak 'Gobbler'

Quercus acutissima 'Gobbler' is a deciduous dense, broad, oval-rounded to broad-rounded tree with low-slung, wide-spreading branches. The cultivar Gobbler is the result of open-pollinated progeny that produce early and abundant acorns. One of the fastest growing oaks, especially in youth. Thrives in the heat of the South. Plant in well-drained, acidic soil but, also adaptable to other types of soil. This species is often confused with Chestnut because of leaf similarity. New Spring foliage is brilliant yellow to golden yellow. Often planted for wildlife especially wild turkeys which consume the acorns. It is also used as a shade or lawn tree. Quercus acutissima is native to eastern Asia.

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Height
40–60 ft.
Spread
20–25 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
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№ 645
Quercus agrifolia coast live oak with a broad evergreen canopy of holly-like leaves
Coast Live Oak
Quercus agrifoliaCoast Live Oak

Quercus agrifolia, the coast live oak, is the evergreen oak of the California coast, the gnarled, dark-canopied tree that shades the golden hills of Steinbeck country and spreads heavy limbs over ranchland and canyon. The holly-like leaves are small, thick, and leathery, glossy dark green above with a spiny-toothed edge, and the tree holds them year round, casting the deep, cool shade that is the plant's signature. Left room, coast live oak builds a broad, low, romantically crooked crown.

Hardiness
Zones 8–10
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
30–70 ft.
Spread
30–60 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
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№ 646
Quercus alba white oak, a broad-canopied native shade tree with lobed blue-green leaves
Wye Oak
Quercus albaWye Oak

Quercus alba, the white oak, is the grandfather of the eastern forest, a slow, massive, long-lived tree that can stand for centuries and outlast the people who plant them. The most famous of all was the Wye Oak of Wye Mills, Maryland, a single white oak that stood for more than four hundred and sixty years and served as Maryland's state tree until a storm brought the giant down in 2002. The broad, rounded crown, the pale, scaly, ash-gray bark, and the deeply lobed, blue-green leaves are the picture most people carry of an oak.

Hardiness
Zones 3–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
50–80 ft.
Spread
50–80 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
Traditional use
digestive health, topical applications, respiratory support
$24.00In stock
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№ 647
Quercus alba 'Grandchildren of Wye Oak' white oak, a broad-canopied native shade tree with lobed blue-green leaves
White Oak
Quercus alba "Grandchildren of Wye Oak"White Oak

These are the grandchildren of a legend. The Wye Oak of Wye Mills, Maryland, was the greatest white oak in the country, a single tree that stood more than four hundred and sixty years and served as Maryland's state tree until a storm finally brought the giant down in 2002. Quercus alba 'Grandchildren of Wye Oak' are seedling-grown descendants of that famous tree, carrying the bloodline of an American icon into gardens that have room for the long view.

Hardiness
Zones 3–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
60–80 ft.
Spread
60–80 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
Traditional use
digestive health, topical applications, respiratory support
$23.00Currently unavailable
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№ 648
Quercus chapmanii Chapman oak with glossy rounded near-evergreen leaves on a sandy scrub site
Chapman Oak
Quercus chapmaniiChapman Oak

This oak is named for a doctor who loved plants more than medicine. Alvan Wentworth Chapman practiced in Apalachicola, on the Florida panhandle, and botanized the Gulf coast so thoroughly that his Flora of the Southern United States, published in 1860, stood for decades as the book on the region's plants; this scrub oak carries his name in thanks.

Hardiness
Zones 7–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
10–25 ft.
Spread
10–15 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Shrub
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№ 649
Quercus coccinea scarlet oak with the whole crown turned brilliant scarlet-red in late autumn
Scarlet Oak
Quercus coccineaScarlet Oak

The name is a promise the tree keeps only at the very end of the year. Coccinea is Latin for scarlet, and scarlet oak earns it in late October, well after the other oaks have turned and dropped, when the whole crown ignites into a clean, carrying red that holds for weeks and can be seen across a valley. On a good tree in the right soil, this is the best fall color the genus offers, which is saying something.

Hardiness
Zones 4–9
Light
Full Sun
Height
60–80 ft.
Spread
40–50 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
$25.00In stock
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№ 650
Quercus hemisphaerica Darlington oak with glossy, willow-slim, laurel-like near-evergreen leaves
Darlington Oak
Quercus hemisphaericaDarlington Oak

This is one of William Bartram's oaks. He came upon the tree on his travels through the southeastern backcountry in the 1770s, and the botanical name still carries his hand, Quercus hemisphaerica Bartram ex Willd., the species epithet meaning half-a-globe, for the little domed cap that sits like a skullcap on the acorn.

Hardiness
Zones 7–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
50–70 ft.
Spread
30–40 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
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№ 651
Quercus incana bluejack oak with silvery blue-gray narrow leaves
Bluejack Oak
Quercus incanaBluejack Oak

The name is the whole description: incana means hoary, gray-haired, and bluejack oak wears a coat of fine pale hairs that turns the foliage a soft blue-gray, almost silver in some lights, unusual in a genus that mostly trades in greens.

Hardiness
Zones 6–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
25–30 ft.
Spread
20–25 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
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№ 652
Quercus laevis turkey oak with glossy turkey-track leaves turning orange-red in fall on a sandy site
Turkey Oak
Quercus laevisTurkey Oak

Turkey oak earns the name from the leaf, three-lobed and clawed and splayed exactly like the track a wild turkey leaves in sand, which is fitting, because sand is where these trees live. Quercus laevis is the signature oak of the deep sandhills, the droughty white-sand ridges of the longleaf country from the Carolinas to the Gulf, ground so poor and so hot that most trees simply decline the invitation.

Hardiness
Zones 7–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
20–30 ft.
Spread
20–30 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
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№ 653
Quercus lyrata overcup oak with lyre-shaped lobed leaves and acorns nearly enclosed by their caps
Overcup Oak
Quercus lyrataOvercup Oak

The overcup oak is named for a small piece of botanical theater: an acorn so nearly swallowed by its cup that only the tip shows, sealed up as if against the floodwaters the tree was born to. Quercus lyrata is a creature of the southern bottomlands, the broad floodplains and backswamps from the Mississippi Delta to the Carolina river bottoms, standing through the cycles of flood and drawdown that drown lesser trees.

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Light
Full Sun
Height
60–80 ft.
Spread
30–40 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
$25.00In stock
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№ 654
Quercus margaretta sand post oak with small cross-shaped rounded-lobed leaves on dry sand
Sand Post Oak
Quercus margarettaSand Post Oak

This oak is named for a woman the botanist married. William Willard Ashe, the tireless North Carolina forester who described hundreds of southern trees, set the species down as Quercus margaretta in honor of Margaret Henry Wilcox, whom he would wed in 1905; few oaks carry so personal a dedication.

Hardiness
Zones 6–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
30–40 ft.
Spread
30–40 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00Currently unavailable
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№ 655
Quercus michauxii swamp chestnut oak with large chestnut-like leaves and pale white-oak bark
Cow Oak
Quercus michauxiiCow Oak

Quercus michauxii is a big, generous bottomland oak that borrows the best of two better-known relatives: the pale, flaky, handsome bark of the white oak, and the large, coarsely toothed, chestnut-shaped leaves of the chestnut oak. The result is one of the noblest of the Southern hardwoods. In Coker and Totten's Trees of the Southeastern States, a 1931 letter from James Henry Rice, Jr. of Colleton County, South Carolina, put it plainly: "It is a noble and beautiful tree and might be termed majestic with no violence to the language."

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
50–70 ft.
Spread
40–50 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
from $12.50In stock
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№ 656
Quercus muehlenbergii chinquapin oak with glossy, coarsely toothed chestnut-like leaves
Chinquapin Oak
Quercus muehlenbergiiChinquapin Oak

This oak carries the name of a Pennsylvania parson. Gotthilf Heinrich Ernst Muhlenberg was a Lutheran minister who botanized on the side, thoroughly enough that the German-American botanist George Engelmann named the species for him, and then misspelled it: Engelmann set an umlaut over the u that Muhlenberg never used, and the rules of botanical naming have fossilized the slip ever since, transliterating it into the tongue-twisting muehlenbergii we are stuck with.

Hardiness
Zones 4–8
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
40–80 ft.
Spread
40–70 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
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№ 657
Quercus myrsinifolia bamboo-leaf oak with willow-fine glossy evergreen leaves
Chinese Evergreen Oak
Quercus myrsinifoliaChinese Evergreen Oak

The cup gives them away. Most oaks set their acorns in a cup of overlapping scales, but Quercus myrsinifolia belongs to the ring-cupped oaks of East Asia, the Cyclobalanopsis, whose acorn sits in a cup banded with smooth concentric rings like a tiny stacked beehive.

Hardiness
Zones 7–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
30–45 ft.
Spread
30–50 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
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№ 658
Quercus myrtifolia myrtle oak with small, glossy, leathery evergreen leaves
Myrtle Oak
Quercus myrtifoliaMyrtle Oak

Myrtle oak takes the name from the leaf, small and leathery and rolled at the edges like a true myrtle, which is about as far from the broad, lobed oak of the schoolbook as the genus travels. Quercus myrtifolia is a creature of the Florida scrub and the sand-pine ridges along the southeastern coast, the bright, fast-draining places where the salt comes in on the wind and the soil is mostly quartz.

Hardiness
Zones 8–10
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
15–20 ft.
Spread
6–10 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00Currently unavailable
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№ 659
Quercus oglethorpensis Oglethorpe oak with slim, willow-like leaves turning orange to red in fall
Oglethorpe Oak
Quercus oglethorpensisOglethorpe Oak

Few oaks in North America are rarer. Quercus oglethorpensis went unnoticed by science until 1940, when the botanist Wilbur Duncan described the tree from material gathered in Oglethorpe County, Georgia, and gave the species the county's name. Even now Oglethorpe oak is known from only a scattering of stands across the Georgia and South Carolina Piedmont, with far-flung outliers in Louisiana and Mississippi, and the species sits on every serious list of oaks of conservation concern.

Hardiness
Zones 6–8
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
40–60 ft.
Spread
30–50 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
$32.00Currently unavailable
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№ 660
Quercus phellos willow oak with fine, narrow, willow-like leaves and an airy rounded crown
Willow Oak
Quercus phellosWillow Oak

The first surprise of Quercus phellos is that nobody believes they're an oak. The leaves are narrow and untoothed, willow-like, finer than an oak has any right to be, and they turn soft yellow before they fall; only the acorns, small and round and produced by the thousand, give the game away.

Hardiness
Zones 6–9
Light
Full Sun
Height
40–75 ft.
Spread
30–50 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Tree
from $16.50In stock
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