Showing 65–80 of 150 results
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Hyptis verticillata/ Condea verticillata (John Charles/ Yerba de San Martin)
$15.006′-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) SKU-IMPCAP
$8.00 -
Ipomoea sagitatta (Saltmarsh Morning-glory)
$6.00 -
Iris hexagona (Dixie Iris)
$15.00 -
Iris tridentata (Savanna Iris)
$8.00 – $12.00 -
Iris x albicans (White Bearded Iris or White Cemetary Iris)
$15.00 -
Justicia ovata var. ovata (Looseflower Water-willow)
$6.00 -
Leucanthemum vulgare (Oxeye Daisy)
$5.00 -
Leucojum aestivum (Summer Snowflake)
$10.00 -
Lonicera sempervirens (Trumpet Honeysuckle)
$20.00 -
Lycopus americanus (American Bugleweed/ American Water Horehound) SKU-LYCSPS
$5.00Native perennial. Purplish foliage. Larval host of Hermit Sphinx. Pollinated by various bees, wasps and flies. Used as dye for skin and hair. Reported to be edible and medicinal. Sun or shade. Average to wet. Deer-resistant.
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Lysimachia ciliata (Fringed Loosestrife)
$8.001′-2.5′ Native Perennial. Blooms from late Spring until Fall. Attracts oil bees which only feed on Lysimachia sps. Overwinters as brilliantly hued rosette. Spreads by seeds and short stolons. Used medicinally. Plant in shade to part shade. Average to wet soil. Tolerates seasonal flooding. Acid to circumneutral soil. It is pollinated by oil bees that only feed on Lysimachia. Hardy Zones 4-9. Native to most of Eastern and Central US and Canada. We propagated our plants from a native population in Screven Co., GA. We have been growing it since 2016. First in Southeastern US?
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Lythrum lanceolatum / Lythrum alatum var. lanceolatum (Southern Winged Loosestrife)
$5.00 -
Mecardonia procumbens syn. Bacopa procumbens (Baby Jump-up)
$6.00 -
Melanthera nivea (Salt and Pepper/ Snow Squarestem)
$7.00 – $14.00