Showing 49–64 of 117 results
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Hibiscus aculeatus (Pineland Hibiscus)
$10.00 -
Hibiscus moscheutos (Eastern Rose-mallow)
$8.00 -
Hippeastrum x johnsonii (St. Joseph’s Lily or Hardy Amaryllis)
$12.00 -
Hypericum densiflorum (Coastal Plain Bushy St. John’s Wort )
$8.00 -
Hyptis verticillata/ Condea verticillata (John Charles/ Yerba de San Martin)
$8.006′-8′ tall and wide heirloom perennial/shrub attracts bees, butterflies and insect. It has been used by medicinally and spiritually from the times of the Aztecs and Mayans to the present.
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Illicium parviflorum (Yellow Anise/ Ocala Anise)
$70.00 -
Impatiens capensis ( Spotted Jewelweed or Spotted Touch-me-not)
$4.00 – $8.00 -
Ipomoea imperati/ Ipomoea stolonifera (Beach Morning-glory)
$6.00 -
Ipomoea sagitatta (Saltmarsh Morning-glory)
$4.00 -
Iresine rhizomatosa (Juda’s Bush)
$5.00 -
Iris hexagona (Dixie Iris)
$10.00 -
Iris x albicans (White Cemetary Iris)
$15.00 -
Justicia ovata var. ovata (Looseflower Water-willow)
$4.00 -
Leucanthemum vulgare (Oxeye Daisy)
$5.00 -
Leucothoe axillaris (Coastal Doghobble)
$12.00 -
Lobelia sp. (Blue Lobelia)
$8.00Native Lobelia blooms or months on end. It was covered with flowers until the snow came in January. They foliage stayed green all winter. Butterflies and hummingbirds love it. It adapts to wide range of soil moisture. I had been calling it Downy Lobelia (Lobelia puberula) but I think this was a mistake. The undersides of the leaves are white. It is definitely not Lobelia siphilitica which some “play native nurseries” are selling as that is not native on the coast. I wish I had pictures.