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My North Creek Nurseries Wish List

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Alchemilla mollis 'Auslese'
Alchemilla mollis 'Auslese'
Common Name: lady's-mantle

Green to bright chartreuse flowers appear in clusters above scalloped, grey-green foliage from late spring through summer. Robust and vigorous, Alchemilla mollis 'Auslese' prefers full sun to part shade and has a wonderfully uniform habit.

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

Aruncus dioicus
Aruncus dioicus
Common Name: goat's beard, bride's feathers

A fantastic native with large, fine-textured feathery blooms in late Spring. Though closely related to Spiraea, goat's beard more closely resembles a giant Astilbe. When happy, Aruncus can be a formidable garden plant, reaching a spread of 6 feet or more. It is lovely when used at woods edge and it can provide a dense screen beneath a high canopy.

Height: 4-6 Feet
Spread: 6 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-9

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

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 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

Sedum spurium 'John Creech'
Sedum spurium 'John Creech'
Common Name: stonecrop

Dr. John Creech, former director of the U.S. National Arboretum, discovered this little beauty in the Siberian Academ Gorodok Gardens in 1971. The small, scalloped green leaves of this weed-smothering groundcover are topped with rose pink flowers in late summer and fall. It is very hardy, vigorous and gorgeous weaving in and out of stepping stones or along a garden path. Ideal for green roofs, rock gardens and containers as well. Tolerant of light shade.

Height: 3-6 Inches
Spread: 12 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-9

Solidago 'Solar Cascade'
Solidago 'Solar Cascade'
Common Name: goldenrod

Delightful, golden-yellow flowers are borne in axillary clusters along reflexing stems from late summer into fall. Reliable, deep green, glossy foliage remains clean throughout the growing seasons. Not an aggressive runner, 'Solar Cascade' is a clump forming perennial reaching knee height, maxing out somewhere between the taller 'Fireworks' and more compact 'Golden Fleece'. Performs best in moist to average garden soil under full sun or partial shade; extremely drought tolerant once established. This great garden plant is easy to propagate and proved to be a standout in The Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden perennial trials. Plant en masse for a dramatic effect or incorporate into seasonal arrangements.

Height: 2-3 Feet
Spread: 1-2 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-8

Stylophorum diphyllum
Stylophorum diphyllum
Common Name: celandine poppy

Brilliant yellow flowers bloom in spring atop blue-green, pinnately lobed foliage. Leaf underside has a silvery cast. An easy-to-grow native that will self sow and form a dense shade groundcover. Tolerates all but the driest conditions. Beautiful paired with Mertensia virginica, Aquilegia canadensis, Aruncus dioicus, and Phlox divaricata.

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