Aster cordifolius 'Avondale' blue wood aster from North Creek Nurseries

Aster cordifolius 'Avondale'

Common: blue wood aster

Aster cordifolius 'Avondale' - 50 per flat

  • Height: 2'-3'
  • Spread: 18"-24"
  • Spacing: 12"
  • Hardiness Zone(s): 3-8

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Plant Details

This selection of the native wood aster is a prolific bloomer, carpeting the shade garden with light blue in early fall, when little else blooms and the hostas are in decline. A quick and easy pot crop for fall sales. Beautiful and long-lasting as a filler in autumn flower arrangements!


Characteristics & Attributes

Exposure

  • Full Shade
  • Part Sun

Soil Moisture Needs

  • Average
  • Moist
  • Dry

Green Infrastructure

  • Woodland

Plug Type

  • Horticultural Plug

For Animals

  • Deer Resistant
  • Pollinator-friendly
  • Songbird-friendly

Attributes

  • Clay Tolerance
  • Native to North America
  • Cut Flower
  • Drought Tolerant

Season of Interest (Flowering)

  • Fall
  • Late Summer

Propagation Type

  • Vegetative

Care & Maintenance

Tolerates clay. Water well on planting and regularly until established. Prefers a partially shaded site, but will tolerate sun or shade. Flowering is best with 3 hours of sun or more. Works well in average, dry or moist soil, but does not like to be consistently wet.

Interesting Notes

Aster cordifolius, now Symphyotrichum cordifolium, is a woodland edge native with blue-purple to off white daisy-like flowers with yellow centers. They have an upright and branched form in cultivation, growing up to 3 feet tall. There is quite a bit of variability in form and leaf shape, especially if other Aster spp. are nearby, but in general, their lower leaves are heart-shaped, or cordate, with upper leaves being ovate. Plant spreads by seed and rhizomotously in a vigorous manner making them an excellent plant en masse.

Blue wood aster can be found throughout the northern United States in upland meadows and forests. It thrives in part sun to part shade but it can take a wide range of conditions, from dry to moist soils. For best flowering in the fall, ensure the plant receives at least 3 hours of sunlight each day.

Planted beneath our Acers and Physocarpus, this Aster cordifolius is a great naturalizer at the edge of woods or as a filler among Hostas and Astilbes – covering up their late season deterioration with thick blooms and sweeps of greens. The fibrous root systems are effective erosion control on hillsides.

This Aster is no different than many others in its family – providing valuable habitat for Lepidoptera larva and is a nectar sources for bees, wasps, and butterflies. Its leaves are forage for many wild animals including wild turkey and Ruffled Grouse.