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My North Creek Nurseries Wish List

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Aquilegia canadensis
Aquilegia canadensis
Common Name: wild columbine

Red flowers with yellow centers hang like drifts of softly illuminated lanterns in April and May. Excellent as a shady rock garden naturalizer, it also is quite content in average garden conditions. Occurs naturally in rich rocky woods, north-facing slopes, cliffs, ledges, pastures, and roadside banks. Native to all states east of the Rockies, but not found in Louisiana.

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

Aquilegia canadensis 'Corbett'
Aquilegia canadensis 'Corbett'
Common Name: wild columbine

Profuse show of butter-yellow, lantern-shaped flowers from April to May. Its short stature, delicate color and mid spring bloom time make it an ideal companion for spring bulbs! It was spotted by Lawrence Clemens who asked that it be named after the Corbett Historic District which is near Monkton in Baltimore County, Maryland. Bluemount Nurseries, of Monkton, MD was the first to offer this charming local Aquilegia to the market. 

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

Asclepias syriaca
Asclepias syriaca
Common Name: common milkweed

This native classic is best known as a food of larval monarch butterflies (along with its cousins A. incarnata and A. tuberosa). Robust, yet beautiful with deep pink clusters of fragrant flowers in June and July followed by lovely pods of silky seeds in October.

Height: 2-4 Feet
Spread: 1 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-9

Aster 'Wood's Blue'
Aster 'Wood's Blue'
Common Name: aster

This member of the Wood's Aster group has the typical low rounded habit and profuse blooming associated with all three. 'Wood's Blue' has perfectly clean foliage, and in the early fall it is covered with clear, medium blue flowers with gold centers. Bred for compact habit, long bloom period and heavy flowering, all of the Wood's Asters are outstanding pot crops and should be used far more often as a sturdy perennial alternative for mums.

Height: 12-15 Inches
Spread: 12-24 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-8

Aster 'Wood's Pink'
Aster 'Wood's Pink'
Common Name: aster

Aster 'Wood's Pink' is virtually mildew and rust free. Like all the Wood's Asters, it is a wonderful container plant, with a compact habit and unstoppable clear pink flowers with gold centers. Bred for compact habit, long bloom period and heavy flowering, all of the Wood's Asters are outstanding pot crops and should be used far more often as a sturdy perennial alternative for mums.

Height: 12-18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-8

Aster cordifolius
Aster cordifolius
Common Name: blue wood aster

Clouds of blue flowers in early fall in shade! A great naturalizer under trees, at the edge of woods, or as a filler among Hostas and Astilbes, which look pretty rough by September. Found in woods and dry meadows.

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

Aster novae-angliae 'Pink Crush'
Aster novae-angliae 'Pink Crush'
Common Name: New England Aster

A dark pink fall-blooming aster with a tidy habit and smothered in flowers? Oh man, we think we may have developed a crush. A 'Pink Crush' that is. An introduction from Walters Gardens, this New England aster is a shorter variety that doesn't splay in the late season like other aster cultivars. 

Height: 20-24 Inches
Spread: 34-38 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-8

Calamagrostis brachytricha
Calamagrostis brachytricha
Common Name: Korean feather reed grass

Calamagrostis brachytricha is a clump-forming grass with bright green leaves reaching about 2 feet. In late summer blooms emerge with a pink tint and reach 3 to 4 feet. The feathery flowers fade to cream in fall and finish in a straw color in winter. A graceful addition to the shade or part shade garden! One of the few flowering grasses that is happy in the shade. Wonderful for cut flowers.

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

Carex cherokeensis
Carex cherokeensis
Common Name: Cherokee sedge

Carex cherokeensis is a native sedge with a soft-medium texture. It prefers moist conditions but is adaptive. Grows in part shade but tolerates full sun in the morning. The inflorescence has been noted as insignificant but, we like the little wispy spikes that add a interest in the spring. 

Height: 12-18 Inches
Spread: 18-24 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 6-9

Carex flaccosperma
Carex flaccosperma
Common Name: blue wood sedge

A beautiful native groundcover with striking glaucus blue foliage, Blue wood sedge is easy to grow and evergreen in warmer zones, though it benefits from a late winter cut back. Early spring flowers are slender and form interesting seed heads. Forms tidy clumps and spreads by seed.

Height: 6-10 Inches
Spread: 12 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-8

Caryopteris × clandonensis
Caryopteris × clandonensis
Common Name: blue mist shrub, bluebeard

According to Plantipp, the motto of this stunning Caryopteris is big, blue & beautiful! We found that to be true in our own trial gardens here at North Creek. Its powdery grey-green foliage is the perfect skirting to present the long wands of stacked deep blue flowers. The flowers are bigger than other Caryopteris that we have trialed with long wands lasting weeks on end. It is a wonderful addition to the landscape or container garden and excellent for cut flowers. Superior low growing habit. 

Height: 30-40 Inches
Spread: 24-36 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-9

Chelone glabra
Chelone glabra
Common Name: turtlehead

Spikes of elegant white flowers top shiny green foliage in late summer and early fall. Grows best in moist meadows, stream banks, and swamps. Favorite breeding site for the Baltimore Checkerspot Butterfly.

Height: 2-4 Feet
Spread: 1-3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8

Clematis virginiana
Clematis virginiana
Common Name: old man's beard

Blooming in late summer-early fall, this vigorous native Clematis virginiana is covered in showy, sweetly-scented white flowers that are 1" across. A fine addition to fences, on trellises, or trained up trees, Virgin's bower grows 12-20' tall. Commonly found in moist, woodland edge areas east of the Mississippi, it grows well in full sun but also can tolerate dry shade. 

Height: 12-20 Feet
Spread: 3-6 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-8

Echinacea purpurea 'Green Twister'
Echinacea purpurea 'Green Twister'
Common Name: coneflower

A release from Jelitto Perennial Seeds, Echinacea 'Green Twister' is a compact, sturdy plant with horizontal facing petals that change in color from edges of lemon green to a bright carmine red center. Colors vary by flower and give a pleasing range of color pattern. 

Height: 2-3 Feet
Spread: 12-18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-8

Geranium 'Azure Rush'
Geranium 'Azure Rush'
Common Name: cranesbill

It is low and tidy and gently fills an area with its fragrant foliage. 'Azure Rush' is generously covered with light blue 2.5 inch blooms. Everything that you have come to love and anticipate from 'Rozanne' is true + improved by her lighter blue daughter.

Height: 14-16 Inches
Spread: 24-28 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-8

Liatris microcephala
Liatris microcephala
Common Name: smallhead blazing star

An exceptional, compact native with fine-textured, deep green grassy leaves. Smallhead blazing star sends up numerous spikes with tassel-like rosy purple flowers in August and September. Unique to the genus, the flowers open from top to bottom on the spike in a slow unfurling of brilliant color. Excellent as a cut flower. Tolerant of clay and drought, very low maintenance. Loved by butterflies! Liatris microcephala can be found in sandy, dry prairies and open glades of the Southern Appalachian Mountains.

Height: 18-24 Inches
Spread: 12-18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-7

Lobelia siphilitica
Lobelia siphilitica
Common Name: great blue lobelia

The spikes of brilliant true blue flowers on this wetland native attract butterflies, hummingbirds and neighbors to your garden! Lobelia siphilitica provides outstanding color for the border, wet meadow or pond edge. Naturalizes easily in moist soils, but tolerates periods of drought.

Height: 2-3 Feet
Spread: 12-18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8

Monarda 'Judith's Fancy Fuchsia'
Monarda 'Judith's Fancy Fuchsia'
Common Name: beebalm

A fan favorite at Mt. Cuba Center’s Monarda trials thanks to superior resistance to powdery mildew—this selection boasts sturdy, upright stems, and a prolific floral display of purplish-red flowers atop clean green foliage.

Height: 3-4 ft
Spread: 18-24 in
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-8

Porteranthus trifoliatus 'Pink Profusion'
Porteranthus trifoliatus 'Pink Profusion'
Common Name: Bowman's root

We've been enjoying this great native for many years in our garden, since it was given to us by the Mt. Cuba Center in 2001. 'Pink Profusion' has clear pink flowers that are held daintily above reddish leaves on deep red stems. The best part is the way the flowers shimmer in a light breeze, as though they will take flight at any moment.

Height: 24-30 Inches
Spread: 24-30 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8

Rubus calycinoides
Rubus calycinoides
Common Name: creeping raspberry

An irresistible quilt-textured, creeping groundcover! Turns deep, vivid red in the fall. Small (1-1.5") deep green, maple-shaped leaves with smooth, light tan undersides. Nearly evergreen for year-round interest. Insect and pest free. White flowers with amber fruits in late spring. Very durable!

Height: 6 Inches
Spread: 18-24 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 6-9

Salvia nemorosa SALLYROSA™ 'April Night'
Salvia nemorosa SALLYROSA™ 'April Night'
Common Name: garden sage

An early blooming, petite Salvia! Blooming a month earlier than the popular 'May Night', Salvia 'April Night' provides lush violet-blue blooms from spring to summer. 

Height: 12-14 Inches
Spread: 12-14 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-9

Schizachyrium scoparium 'Standing Ovation'
Schizachyrium scoparium 'Standing Ovation'
Common Name: little bluestem

A North Creek discovery sure to give a brilliant performance in the landscape, worthy of applause.  It keeps a tight, upright habit throughout the entire season and has stood strong even in the rich soils of our trial gardens. A warm season grass that does well in poor, dry soils.  Spikey bluish-green stems and leaves transition to a sizzling display of oranges, reds, yellows, and purplish-browns in the autumn.  Also provides winter interest before cutting back in early spring to make way for new growth.

Height: 3-4 Feet
Spread: 12-18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-10

Solidago graminifolia
Solidago graminifolia
Common Name: flat-top goldenrod

Fine-textured linear foliage and golden flat-topped inflorescences in late summer. Cherished by butterflies and preying mantises and well as the wildflower enthusiast.

Height: 3-4 Feet
Spread: 1-2 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-9

Solidago sempervirens
Solidago sempervirens
Common Name: seaside goldenrod

An east coast native that is useful for dune restoration projects, stormwater management, roadside, and habitat plantings.

Height: 3-6 Feet
Spread: 2-3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-9

Tiarella cordifolia 'Brandywine'
Tiarella cordifolia 'Brandywine'
Common Name: foamflower

From our friend Sinclair Adam (The Pharoah of Foamflowers) of Dunvegan Nursery, Tiarella cordifolia 'Brandywine' is rated as one of the most vigorous of the genus. A strong grower with glossy, rugose leaves and excellent bronze fall and winter color. Bold, creamy white flowers persist for 6 to 8 weeks. A robust clump former with some short runners in spring and fall.

Height: 8-10 Inches
Spread: 12-18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8

Verbena hastata
Verbena hastata
Common Name: swamp verbena

The tall, thin spikes of Blue Vervain grace the wet meadows of the US in July and August. Verbena hastata is a short-lived perennial that readily self sows where happy. A great plant for pond's edge where it seeds in between sedges and rushes and cheerfully holds its own.

Height: 4-6 Feet
Spread: 2-3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-9