Sign up for News & Availability Emails
Site Search:
Print Wish List

My North Creek Nurseries Wish List

Click here for a printable version of this list.

Return to Plant List
Agastache 'Golden Jubilee'
Agastache 'Golden Jubilee'
Common Name: hyssop

Definitely a WOW! plant. Chartreuse, Coleus-like foliage is incredible on its own, but the blue bottlebrush flowers in mid summer top it off beautifully. Very hardy and will self sow. Benefits from a little shade in production to protect leaf color. A 2003 All-America Selection Flower Award Winner.

Height: 2-3 Feet
Spread: 2-3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-9

Athyrium filix-femina 'Victoriae'
Athyrium filix-femina 'Victoriae'
Common Name: lady fern

"This is the most spectacular of all cultivars in its magnificent frond architecture. It is really the Queen of Green", according to Dr. John Mickel, former curator of ferns at the New York Botanical Garden and author of "Ferns for American Gardens". As with other forms of lady ferns there is so much variability with spore production that it is necessary to produce this form in tissue culture, so its clones are identical to the parent. This superb selection has fronds whose pinnae (leaflets) crisscross to form x's and has crested pinnae tips. Another superior cultivar in the Mickel Collection™.

Height: 18-24 Inches
Spread: 20-24 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8

Caltha palustris
Caltha palustris
Common Name: marsh marigold

Native to northern states and Canada, this little beauty is at home at pond's edge or along a stream. It is clumping by nature, but can seed in to form a dense groundcover in a consistently moist site. In early spring, hundreds of bright yellow buttercup flowers dot the green carpet of cordate foliage. Deer usually leave this alone! Found in marshes, swamps, and wet meadows from North Carolina to Alaska.

Height: 8-12 Inches
Spread: 12-18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-7

Dryopteris marginalis
Dryopteris marginalis
Common Name: eastern woodfern

The leathery leaves of Dryopteris marginalis are a beautiful addition to the woodland garden and can form a lovely and easy to maintain groundcover. A sturdy east coast native, it forms a tidy clump that will not spread and is very tolerant of dry shade conditions once it has established. Marginal wood fern is often found in shaded crevices of rocky ledges and bluffs from Newfoundland to Georgia, west to Oklahoma and Minnesota.

Height: 12-18 Inches
Spread: 12-18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-8

Geranium macrorrhizum 'Bevan's Variety'
Geranium macrorrhizum 'Bevan's Variety'
Common Name: bigroot geranium

Vivid magenta-pink flowers above mounds of large, scented foliage in spring and early summer. An excellent deer-resistant, spreading groundcover for full to part sun areas with the added benefit of lovely red-tinted foliage in the fall.

Height: 8-12 Inches
Spread: 18-24 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8

Helianthus salicifolius 'First Light'
Helianthus salicifolius 'First Light'
Common Name: willowleaf sunflower

An explosion of golden yellow flowers combined with a manageable height makes this a superior selection. Despite its name, this plant can be found literally blanketed in flowers in the late summer and into the fall when most other Helianthus are past. Flowers form on upright, self-supporting stems but instead of the typical tall sunflower, Helianthus 'First Light' forms a nice, compact clump of fuzzy, linear leaves topping out just above 3 feet.

Height: 3-4 Feet
Spread: 2-3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-9

Oenothera fruticosa 'Fireworks'
Oenothera fruticosa 'Fireworks'
Common Name: sundrops
Confused for many years in the trade, we are proud to carry the true 'Fireworks'. Deep bronze foliage and red stems are contrasted by red buds opening to canary yellow blooms in June. The individual flowers may not last for more than a day or two, but they open in succession leaving the plant in continuous bloom. Burgundy rosettes in winter. More compact and darker than 'Summer Solstice'. The most popular cultivar of the Oenotheras!
Height: 15-18 Inches
Spread: 12-24 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-9

Pycnanthemum muticum
Pycnanthemum muticum
Common Name: clustered mountain mint

We give up! So many of you claimed this mountain mint to be superior to Pycnanthemum virginianum that we decided to try it for ourselves. We love it! Its leaves are broader and more lustrous, the bracts are silvery and very showy, the flowers are pinkish and its habit is more compact. Nicely aromatic. This native is happiest at the wood's edge, so it is excellent for a naturalized border or woodland garden. Mountain Mint is one of the best nectar sources for native butterflies, so butterfly gardeners can't do without this one. Our bees go crazy for it, too!

Height: 2-3 Feet
Spread: 2 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8