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87 plants in this collection

№ 021
Rhododendron stenopetalum 'Linearifolium' spider azalea, spidery lavender-pink flowers with strap-like petals.
Spider Azalea, Seigai Tsutsuji
Rhododendron stenopetalum 'Linearifolium'Spider Azalea, Seigai Tsutsuji

A three-hundred-year-old Japanese garden azalea that does not look quite like a rhododendron, does not look quite like an azalea, and does not really look like anything else. The leaves are narrow green ribbons, three to five millimeters wide and a couple of inches long, closer to willow or fine grass than to the broad rounded foliage of an ordinary tsutsuji. The flowers, opening in late April and May, follow the same grammar: deeply divided into long strap-like petals in lilac-pink to lavender-rose, tangled and knotted at first, then unfurling slowly into a shape that reads, depending on the eye, as a crane fly, a spider, or a piece of decorative garnish. Wabi-sabi made evergreen.

Hardiness
Zones 6–8
Light
Part Shade
Height
3–5 ft.
Spread
3–5 ft.
Bloom
Purple
Plant type
Shrub
$25.00Currently unavailable
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№ 022
Polemonium reptans, creeping Jacob's ladder, sky-blue spring flowers over ladder-like foliage.
Creeping Jacob's Ladder
Polemonium reptansCreeping Jacob's Ladder

A spring-blooming native of the eastern woodlands, found from Ontario and Quebec south through the Appalachians and as far west as Minnesota and Oklahoma, growing on rich deciduous forest floors, along streambanks, and at the bases of sandstone canyons. Polemonium reptans is one of those native plants that rewards close attention. The leaves are pinnately compound, with seven to twenty-one paired leaflets running up each stem like the rungs of a ladder, the source of the common name, which gestures all the way back to the biblical Jacob and his dream of a stairway to heaven. The genus name is older still: Polemonium honors King Polemon of Pontus, an ancient Greek ruler with a side interest in herbalism.

Hardiness
Zones 3–8
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
1–2 ft.
Spread
1–2 ft.
Bloom
Blue
Plant type
Perennial
Traditional use
respiratory support, detoxification & cleansing, topical applications, general wellness
$20.00Currently unavailable
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№ 023
Salvia koyamae (Japanese yellow sage) big arrow-shaped leaves and pale butter-yellow flowers
Japanese Yellow Sage
Salvia koyamaeJapanese Yellow Sage

Here is a salvia that wants what salvias are not supposed to want. Most of the genus comes from sunbaked Mediterranean hillsides, dry Mexican mountains, and dusty California chaparral, so that the very word Salvia is shorthand for full sun, gravelly soil, and a watering regime closer to neglect than care. Salvia koyamae, endemic to the cool wooded slopes of Honshu in Japan, breaks every rule, asking instead for shade, moist humus-rich woodland duff, and the cool morning light that filters through a deciduous canopy. This is, in short, the salvia to grow where hostas would otherwise go.

Hardiness
Zones 6–10
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
1–2 ft.
Spread
2–3 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Perennial
$20.00Currently unavailable
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№ 024
Dendropanax trifidus, kakuremino, glossy evergreen ivy-like foliage
Tree Ivy, Kakuremino
Dendropanax trifidusTree Ivy, Kakuremino

Dendropanax trifidus is one of those quiet, aristocratic evergreens that rewards a second look and then a third. To the casual eye the plant reads as a glossy, tropical-looking small tree, something you would expect to sulk at the first frost; in truth this is a tough, warm-temperate native of the coastal forests of southern Japan, Korea, and Taiwan, hardy well into the Southeast and unbothered by heat, humidity, or a mild winter.

Hardiness
Zones 7–9
Light
Part Shade
Height
12–15 ft.
Spread
8–12 ft.
Plant type
Tree
$35.00In stock
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№ 025
Symphyotrichum grandiflorum, large-flowered aster, big deep-violet flowers in late fall.
Large-flowered Aster
Symphyotrichum grandiflorumLarge-flowered Aster

A native aster with a regional accent. Most of the asters Americans plant are wide-ranging species that turn up from Maine to Texas and read essentially the same wherever they grow. Symphyotrichum grandiflorum is more particular, with a native range small and specific: the Atlantic Coastal Plain of Virginia and the Carolinas, plus the Piedmont of the Carolinas, and little more. A few hundred miles of sandy roadsides, dry pine-oak woods, abandoned fields, and forest edges from the Tidewater into the rolling country west of the fall line. For a gardener in the Carolinas or Georgia, this is one of the few asters that is genuinely here, a piece of the actual Atlantic Coastal Plain flora rather than a borrowed prairie species filling in for a missing native.

Hardiness
Zones 6–8
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
1–3 ft.
Spread
1–2 ft.
Bloom
Purple
Plant type
Perennial
$18.00Currently unavailable
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№ 026
Salvia greggii 'Cherry Queen' luminous cherry-red tubular flowers
Cherry Queen Autumn Sage
Salvia greggii 'Cherry Queen'Cherry Queen Autumn Sage

'Cherry Queen' is a North Carolina-bred salvia from one of the most important salvia hybridizers America has produced. The cross is a deliberate one, between Salvia greggii, the autumn sage of the Texas and Mexican borderlands, prized for drought tolerance and a six-month bloom, and Salvia blepharophylla, a Mexican species whose name, eyelash-leaved sage, comes from the tiny fringe of hairs at the edge of each leaf (Greek blepharon, eyelash, and phylla, leaves). Blepharophylla carries the most saturated, signal-bright red flower in the whole genus, but the plant spreads by stolons in ways most gardeners do not want and resents cold winters, while greggii brings the bones and the durability. The breeder who put the two together was Dr. Richard "Rich" Dufresne of Candor, North Carolina, an organic chemist who became, more or less by accident, the leading American breeder of woody salvias for the eastern climate. Dufresne died in December 2018, leaving a body of work that includes 'Cherry Chief', 'Maraschino', and this selection, which Plant Delights Nursery called the most brilliant red they had ever seen on any hardy salvia.

Hardiness
Zones 7–10
Light
Full Sun
Height
2–3 ft.
Spread
2–3 ft.
Bloom
Red
Plant type
Shrub
$26.00Currently unavailable
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№ 027
Spiraea virginiana
Virginia Spirea
Spiraea virginianaVirginia Spirea

Important: This plant is sold within South Carolina only.In the high-gradient streams of the southern Appalachians, the Gauley, the Bluestone, the Greenbrier, scattered tributaries of the New River, and a handful of similar second- and third-order rivers, grows a shrub that holds on to rocky bars and scoured banks where almost nothing else can. This is Spiraea virginiana, the Appalachian spiraea, a plant that evolved alongside the violent flood regime of these mountain rivers and depends on that disturbance. The floods scour competing vegetation off the banks, expose mineral soil for germination, and break off rhizome fragments that float downstream to colonize new sites. Where the rivers were dammed, the floods stopped, and the spiraea began to disappear.

Hardiness
Zones 5–8
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
3–8 ft.
Spread
4–8 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$38.00In stock
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№ 028
Rosa 'Magic Dragon' climbing miniature rose, clusters of small deep-red double flowers.
Magic Dragon Climbing Miniature Rose
Rosa sp. 'Magic Dragon'Magic Dragon Climbing Miniature Rose

A small rose with a long story. 'Magic Dragon' is a 1969 introduction by Ralph S. Moore (1907 to 2009), the legendary Father of Miniature Roses, who bred more than three hundred cultivars from a small nursery in Visalia, California across nearly seven decades. Moore all but invented the climbing miniature category single-handedly, crossing tiny old varieties like Rouletti with full-sized climbers and selecting the offspring that kept the small leaves and flowers but stretched into climbing wood.

Hardiness
Zones 7–9
Light
Full Sun
Height
2–6 ft.
Spread
2–4 ft.
Bloom
Red
Plant type
Shrub
$27.00In stock
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№ 029
Salvia 'Phyllis Fancy' lavender-white flowers in dark purple calyces
Phyllis Fancy Sage
Salvia ‘Phyllis Fancy’Phyllis Fancy Sage

Salvia 'Phyllis Fancy' is a vigorous, large hybrid sage with a good pedigree, found as a chance seedling at the University of California, Santa Cruz Arboretum and named for a longtime volunteer there. The parentage is thought to involve Salvia leucantha, the Mexican bush sage, and possibly Salvia chiapensis, though the cross has never been confirmed.

Hardiness
Zones 7–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
4–5 ft.
Spread
6–7 ft.
Bloom
Purple
Plant type
Perennial
$20.00Currently unavailable
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№ 030
Callicarpa americana, American beautyberry, close view of magenta-purple berry clusters
American Beautyberry
Callicarpa americanaAmerican Beautyberry

The genus name says it: Callicarpa, from the Greek kallos, beauty, and karpos, fruit, beautiful fruit, a genus named for exactly what it does. Callicarpa americana, the American beautyberry, is the southeastern native that gives the genus a calling card. From late August into November, the plant sets dense clusters of small drupes in a luminous magenta-purple, a color that registers as almost unreal in the late-summer landscape, somewhere between fuchsia and amethyst, with no real precedent among native fruits. The berries gather in tight whorls around the stem at every leaf node, all the way down the arching branches, so that a mature shrub in October looks less like a shrub bearing fruit than a ribbon of purple glass beads strung along the branches.

Hardiness
Zones 7–11
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
6–8 ft.
Spread
6–8 ft.
Bloom
Pink
Plant type
Shrub
Traditional use
topical applications, digestive health, immune support
$23.00Currently unavailable
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№ 031
Prunus angustifolia, Chickasaw plum, white spring flowers on bare branches.
Chickasaw Plum
Prunus angustifoliaChickasaw Plum

A native plum with a longer human history than any other fruit in North America. Prunus angustifolia, the Chickasaw plum, also called Cherokee plum, sand plum, sandhill plum, or Florida sand plum depending on the part of the range you are standing in, was actively cultivated by Indigenous peoples across the southeastern and central United States long before European contact. The Chickasaw, Cherokee, and several other nations carried the species in their orchards and food gardens, dried the fruit for winter storage, and almost certainly moved the plant eastward through pre-Columbian trade networks from what botanists now believe to be the species' true origin further west. The species was so deeply associated with Indigenous cultivation by the time European naturalists arrived that the binomial angustifolia, narrow leaf, eventually displaced earlier names like P. chicasa in formal taxonomy, though the common names kept the tribal attribution. Kansas made the plant its official state fruit in 2022. Few American native fruits carry their human history this visibly.

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
6–10 ft.
Spread
6–10 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
Traditional use
topical applications, digestive health, respiratory support
$23.00Currently unavailable
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№ 032
Indigofera amblyantha pink indigo, an airy deciduous shrub with soft pink pea-shaped flowers in upright racemes.
Pink Indigo
Indigofera amblyanthaPink Indigo

Ted Stephens of Nurseries Caroliniana calls this one of his top ten favorite plants, and the reason is bloom. Indigofera amblyantha, the pink indigo, is a fast, airy, deciduous shrub from the streambanks of central China, a nitrogen-fixing legume in the vast genus Indigofera, and one of the longest-flowering hardy shrubs a Southern garden can grow.

Hardiness
Zones 6–8
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
5–8 ft.
Spread
4–6 ft.
Bloom
Pink
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00Currently unavailable
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№ 033
Abutilon pictum 'Souvenir de Bonn' from the front
Variegated Flowering Maple
Abutilon pictum ‘Souvenir de Bonn’Variegated Flowering Maple

Call it a flowering maple if you like, but there is not a drop of maple in it. Abutilon pictum belongs to the mallow family, alongside hibiscus, hollyhock, okra, and cotton, and only the lobed, maple-shaped leaves account for the nickname. What the leaves of 'Souvenir de Bonn' actually do is carry a wide, irregular margin of cream around their green, a variegation bold enough to earn the plant its place on looks alone. The flowers settle the matter. All season they dangle from the branches like small paper lanterns, apricot to salmon, each bell veined through with crimson, swinging on thin stalks where the hummingbirds find them. 'Souvenir de Bonn' is among the oldest abutilons still in gardens, a parlor plant out of the conservatory age, when a variegated flowering maple was the sort of thing one kept in a bright room through winter and carried out to the terrace each summer. The species hails from Brazil; the cultivar name is a keepsake of Bonn, a souvenir that outlasted whoever first carried it home. They are tender, frost being their one real enemy, and in our climate they may sail through a mild winter outdoors or die to the ground and return from the root. Either way they earn their keep, blooming spring to frost and beyond, asking only for sun, rich soil, and water enough to keep the show going. Set them where you pass close, on a patio or against a warm wall, where the lanterns can be read at eye level.

Hardiness
Zones 8–10
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
8–10 ft.
Spread
4–6 ft.
Bloom
Orange
Plant type
Shrub
$26.00In stock
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№ 034
Lonicera x purpusii winter honeysuckle, small creamy-white tubular flowers along bare winter stems
Winter Honeysuckle
Lonicera x purpusiiWinter Honeysuckle

In the dead of winter, when the garden asks for little and gives less, Lonicera × purpusii answers with perfume. This winter honeysuckle is a hybrid of two Chinese species, Lonicera fragrantissima and Lonicera standishii, and carries the best of both: small, creamy-white, tubular flowers that open along the bare stems from late winter into early spring, throwing a clean, lemon-sweet fragrance that carries yards on a mild day.

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
6–8 ft.
Spread
6–8 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00In stock
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№ 035
Callistemon 'Woodlander's Hardy', hardy red bottlebrush, brilliant red bottlebrush flower spikes
Hardy Red Bottlebrush
Callistemon 'Woodlander's Hardy' ‘Woodlanders Hardy’Hardy Red Bottlebrush

This is a Woodlanders plant in the most literal sense: selected, named, and introduced to the American nursery trade by this nursery, in this town, decades ago. The cultivar now carries our name across the country. One Green World in Oregon, Cistus on Sauvie Island, Greenleaf as a national wholesaler, Wilson Bros in three-gallon, Cloud Mountain Farm in Washington, Dancing Oaks in the Willamette Valley, and dozens of regional nurseries from Louisiana to Idaho all carry the plant. Few cultivars in American horticulture are so permanently tied to a single small nursery in Aiken, South Carolina. To buy here is to buy at the source.

Hardiness
Zones 7–10
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
4–6 ft.
Spread
4–6 ft.
Bloom
Red
Plant type
Shrub
$38.00In stock
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№ 036
Callicarpa americana 'Welch's Pink', pink beautyberry, clear pink berry clusters on arching stems
Pink Beautyberry
Callicarpa americana ‘Welch's Pink’Pink Beautyberry

Everyone who grows the native beautyberry knows the plant by the autumn display: those improbable whorls of magenta-purple fruit circling every stem like something a florist arranged and forgot to bill for. 'Welch's Pink' is that plant, in a color the species was not supposed to have.

Hardiness
Zones 7–10
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
4–6 ft.
Spread
4–6 ft.
Bloom
Pink
Plant type
Shrub
$32.00Currently unavailable
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№ 037
Kalmia latifolia 'Bullseye', mountain laurel, white flowers ringed with a broad purple band and cinnamon-purple buds
Mountain Laurel, 'Bullseye'
Kalmia latifolia 'Bullseye'Mountain Laurel, 'Bullseye'

Of all the patterned mountain laurels, 'Bullseye' plays the boldest trick with color. The cinnamon-purple buds are handsome in their own right, and when they open the flowers reveal a broad band of deep purple-maroon ringing a white throat and a clean white edge, the concentric target that gives this selection a name. 'Bullseye' belongs to Kalmia latifolia, the broadleaf evergreen native to the acid slopes of the eastern United States, and represents the golden era of Kalmia breeding led by Dr. Richard Jaynes at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, whose decades of selection gave gardeners the banded, picoteed, and richly budded laurels grown today.

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
4–5 ft.
Spread
4–5 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$34.00Currently unavailable
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№ 038
Magnolia ashei Ashe magnolia, large creamy-white flower with purple blotch at the petal bases
Ashe Magnolia
Magnolia asheiAshe Magnolia

Magnolia ashei, the Ashe magnolia, is one of the great show-offs of the plant world packed into a shrub-sized frame. The enormous leaves, often two feet long and nearly a foot wide, give a decidedly tropical air, and the flowers are astonishing: creamy-white goblets up to a foot across, sweetly fragrant, each marked with a bold purple blotch at the base of the inner petals. Best of all, the Ashe magnolia blooms while still young and small, sometimes at barely knee height, a rare gift among magnolias.

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
15–20 ft.
Spread
15–20 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$32.00Currently unavailable
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№ 039
Aquilegia canadensis, eastern red columbine, nodding red-and-yellow spurred flowers over lacy foliage
Eastern Red Columbine
Aquilegia canadensisEastern Red Columbine

Few spring sights stir the woodland gardener like wild columbine in bloom. Aquilegia canadensis hangs nodding red-and-yellow bells, spurred and lantern-like, over lacy blue-green foliage, catching the low light of April along forest edges, rocky outcrops, and Appalachian coves where the plant has grown for ages. The eastern red columbine, or simply wild columbine, is among the most beloved of native spring wildflowers.

Hardiness
Zones 4–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
12–18 in.
Spread
12–15 in.
Bloom
Red
Plant type
Perennial
Traditional use
heart support, detoxification & cleansing, pain relief
$18.00Currently unavailable
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№ 040
Buddleja madagascariensis, Madagascar butterfly bush, arching panicle of yellow-to-pink flowers over silvery foliage
Madagascar Butterfly Bush
Buddleja madagascariensisMadagascar Butterfly Bush

Endemic to the mountain scrub of Madagascar, where the plant scrambles along slopes between two and six thousand feet, Buddleja madagascariensis throws out long arching canes that will climb to ten feet given a wall to lean on. The flowers come in late winter and spring on terminal panicles up to ten inches long, opening deep yellow and aging through orange to soft pink along the same spike, all of it carrying a honeyed fragrance strong enough to scent a courtyard. The leaves are narrowly ovate, dark green above, silvery and felted beneath, so the whole shrub seems to flicker when wind moves through the canes.

Hardiness
Zones 8–10
Light
Full Sun
Height
5–8 ft.
Spread
6–10 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Shrub
$32.00In stock
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