Herbaceous Perennials

The plants that come back. Herbaceous perennials rise from the crown each spring, flower through the warm months, and retreat to the ground in winter, returning larger the year after. They are the flowering heart of the border, the long-term investment that repays a gardener season after season.

92 plants in this collection

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About the Herbaceous Perennials Collection

Herbaceous perennials are the plants that make a garden feel settled and alive. Each one rises from the crown in spring, flowers through the warm months, and dies back to the ground with the cold, returning wider and stronger the following year. Where annuals ask to be replanted and woody plants hold a fixed frame, perennials give a garden that changes week to week and deepens with age.

In the landscape they are the connective tissue of a planting, the layer that carries color and movement between the shrubs and the paths. Massed in drifts they read boldly from a distance; threaded through mixed borders they soften hard structure and stitch the seasons together, one wave of bloom handing off to the next from the first warm days into fall.

We grow perennials heavily because they do so much ecological work for so little input. A well-chosen perennial planting feeds bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds across a long season, offers seed and cover as the year turns, and asks for a fraction of the water and care that a bedded-out garden demands. Many are regional natives, adapted to local soil and weather and generous to the wildlife that evolved alongside them.

Perennials shine brightest in company. Weave them through the arching lines of our Grasses and Bamboos, layer spring Bulbs and Tubers at their feet, and lean on our Southeastern Natives and Sun Lovers collections for tougher companions in the hardest sites. Choose for bloom time, height, and light, and the border will hold color from spring to frost.