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
Coreopsis 'Crème Brûlée'
Coreopsis 'Crème Brûlée'
Common Name: tickseed

A more vigorous version of 'Moonbeam' that fills in faster in the spring and has larger flowers that occur all along the stems rather than just above the foliage, giving a fuller overall appearence. Overwinters well.

Height: 18-24 Inches
Spread: 1-3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-8

Echinacea purpurea
Echinacea purpurea
Common Name: coneflower

Up the WOW factor in your garden with PowWow® Wild Berry, a 2010 All-America Selection award winner! This spectacular variety is extremely well-branched for profuse blooms and flower power summer to frost. Brilliant rose-purple flowers retain color longer without fading and will bloom without the need for deadheading. Amazing in a sunny perennial border or wildlife garden. Easy to grow and very adaptable to heat, humidity, drought or poor soils.

Height: 20-24 Inches
Spread: 12-16 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-8

Helenium 'Mardi Gras'
Helenium 'Mardi Gras'
Common Name: sneezeweed

Helenium 'Mardi Gras' produces a festival of multicolored blooms to jazz up the garden for six to eight weeks in mid to late summer. Yellow petals are lavishly edged with bright orange-red, aging to clear red edged in gold, all surrounding deep chestnut cones. Gorgeous in a pot! Great as a cut flower, its long stems are sturdy and vase life is long. Heleniums are naturally resistant, even toxic, to deer and rabbits. An early pinch back helps promote branching.

Height: 36-40 Inches
Spread: 24-36 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8

Helenium autumnale
Helenium autumnale
Common Name: common sneezeweed

Our local native with yellow or bronze single daisy-like flowers on stout branched stems in late summer. Petals have distinct tooth-like indentations; hence the common name, dog-toothed daisy. All sneezeweeds have three-lobed petals which distiguish them from Rudbeckia and other yellow coneflowers. Brown, rust colored fruit appear in fall. Great for cut flowers and the avid butterfly gardener.

Height: 3-5 Feet
Spread: 3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-8

Monarda fistulosa 'Claire Grace'
Monarda fistulosa 'Claire Grace'
Common Name: wild bergamot
This great plant was named by Mike and Barbara Bridges, of Southern Perennials and Herbs, for their daughter. Soft lavender pin cushion-like flowers. Quite mildew resistant, with excellent, shiny foliage. Extremely showy. A must for the avid butterfly gardener!
Height: 3 Feet
Spread: 2 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-8

Monarda punctata
Monarda punctata
Common Name: spotted beebalm

A valuable ecological species, Monarda punctata is the equivalent of a juice bar at the gym for nectar loving/needing insects! BONUS, it also resists all other kinds of mites that could impact the bees because it is incredibly high in thymol. If you are in the area where the endangered Karner Blue still resides, you will be helping restore them to safe status by planting a stand of Monarda punctata, as this is their food mothership.

Height: 24-30 Inches
Spread: 12 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-9

Rudbeckia fulgida var. sullivantii 'Little Goldstar'
Rudbeckia fulgida var. sullivantii 'Little Goldstar'
Common Name: orange coneflower

This knee-high performer is a knockout in the landscape! Selected for copious floral display and dwarf habit with increased manageability, this variety has excellent branching and forms a tidy, compact clump. A bit more floriferous than 'Goldsturm', flowers are held high above rich green foliage and bloom from July into October.

Height: 12-16 Inches
Spread: 12-24 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-9

Scirpus cyperinus
Scirpus cyperinus
Common Name: wool grass
A large, upright marsh grass with attractive wooly inflorescences that turn coppery in late summer and persist into winter.
Height: 4-6 Feet
Spread: 3-5 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-9

Silene caroliniana var. wherryi 'Short and Sweet'
Silene caroliniana var. wherryi 'Short and Sweet'
Common Name: wild pinks

Delightful, compact and easy to grow, Silene 'Short and Sweet' is an excellent choice for bright shade or full sun. It is covered in deep pink flowers in late spring. Very reliable for us through wet and dry seasons, and in a cool spring it seems to bloom foreverone year we tracked 8 weeks of full bloom! A great native substitute for Dianthus, this Silene has similar appearance and bloom time, but tolerates a wider variety of garden situations. Silene 'Short and Sweet' is a fantastic plant for naturalizing, yet it can hold its own as a specimen in a container or patio garden as well.

Height: 6-8 Inches
Spread: 10-15 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-7