Showing 33–48 of 138 results
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Commelina erecta (Sand Dayflower or Widow’s Tears)
$5.00 – $10.00 -
Commelina virginica (Virginia Dayflower)
$8.00 -
Conoclinium coelestinum (Hardy Ageratum)
$4.00 -
Coreopsis palustris (Beadle’s Coreopisis)
$8.00 – $15.00 -
Crinum americanum/ Crinum erubescens (Swamp Lily)
$16.00 -
Deutzia scabra ( “McIntosh Co., GA” Fuzzy Deutzia) SKU-DEUSCA
$12.00 – $20.00 -
Dicliptera brachiata (Branched Foldwing)
$7.00 – $15.00 -
Dyschoriste oblongifolia “Laurel Bay” (“Laurel Bay” Pineland Twinflower)
$7.00 -
Dyspania anthelmintica/ Chenopodium anthelmintica/ Chenopodium ambrosioides (Dune Wormseed, Epazote, Mexican Tea)
$8.00 -
Endodeca serpentaria syn. Aristolochia serpentaria (Virginia snakeroot, Virginia Dutchman’s Pipe)
$25.00 -
Eragrostis elliottii (Elliott’s Lovegrass) SKU-ERAELL
$6.00 -
Eryngium baldwinii (Baldwin’s Eryngo)
$6.00 -
Eupatorium perfoliatum (Boneset)
$8.00 -
Eustachys petraea (Dune Finger-grass)
$8.00 -
Euthamia sps. (Flat-topped Goldenrod)
$4.00Butterflies and bees love this fall blooming golden-flowered native perennial. Birds love the seeds. It spreads quickly to fill gaps in the garden, but it is shallow-rooted and easy to contain. It can grow waist-high, but if you cut the longer stems to the ground periodically, can be kept much shorter. It thrives in full sun to part shade, in wet to dry soils. Growing in sand dunes and edges of salt marshes, it tolerates salt spray and occasional salt flooding. Deer will browse it occasionally, but not enough to do any damage. Indeed, in most gardens, it can be used as a “deer baffle” to protect more sensitive plantings. If you kill it, you’ve got talent.
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Eutrochium dubium (formerly Eupatorium dubium) (Coastal plain Joe-Pye weed)
$8.00