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WHO IS PUNNETT I get asked this all the time, I always assumed that you could infer this from the comments scattered throughout the catalog. Apparently not; for the record Dick Punnett is our highly skilled propagator. he does most of our cutting and grafting and despite being blind in one eye is a veritable samurai with a razor blade. He uses a ton of razor blades, and more than his share of bandaids as well, although generally you find him sitting there with blood dripping still making cuttings and seemingly oblivious. During summer when he is sticking cuttings in the nearing frames he sits in a lawn chair on the shady side of the northernmost frame. He noticed that there were always wasps flying around but he has a zen thing with stinging insects (as well as dripping blood) and was too focused on making cuttings to investigate. Moreover every nearing frame has a wasps nest or two on the shade board and carpenter bees living in the 2x4’s. Weeks later he sat down in the chair and curled his fingers under the armrest, directly into a huge nest full of Polistes. He did not get stung but we did remove the nest under the arm-rest, (we left the other nests although the skunks eventually ate most of them, how they manage this without getting the crap stung out of them is beyond me) His garden is amazing, it covers acres with treasures hidden in every corner, and huge specimens of things that have to be seen to be believed. In the past it was primarily a shade garden although he has a huge tufa garden that is mostly in sun. In recent years his garden has been been under attack, lightning storms, wind storms, ice storms, gypsy moth, Emerald Ash Borer and a plague of meadow voles. All have taken their toll resulting in the loss of dozens of mature trees (this means days of chain sawing and Dick is worse than Mexicans when it comes to earplugs). The worst of it is nothing can fall without smashing other plants, and they never fall on something you hate.



Product Image Item Name Price+
Amorpha fruticosa

Amorpha fruticosa

Bastard Indigo, the perfect gift for that special someone, flowers are generally purple pea things although pale blue or white is possible, on plants that can reach 4m in height.
$19.00

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Amorpha nana

Amorpha nana

Attractive miniature shrublets that may reach 18” with age, with doubly pinnate olive green leaves and spikes of blue-violet pea flowers in summer, they mix nicely with dwarf conifers and rock plants; Bradshaw’s collections from Boulder Co, Co at 5800’.
$19.00

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Aralia spinosa

Aralia spinosa

Dick brought us a big plant of this Eastern American native a few years back, the above ground part at least, most of the roots remained in his garden; it hardly mattered, it has grown with incredible vigor, suckering wildly and producing immense clusters of frothy white flowers atop 20-30’ stems. Honeybees are drawn as if by magic (you can hear the honeybees halfway across the nursery).
$19.00

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Aronia melanocarpa 'Autumn Magic'

Aronia melanocarpa 'Autumn Magic'

More compact than the species with brilliant red and purple autumn foliage and clusters of persistent purplish black fruits, I suspect it is actually a hybrid with arbutifolia since pure melanocarpa does not display good fall color.
$19.00

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Aronia prunifolia 'Hugin'

Aronia prunifolia 'Hugin'

A Scandinavian selection with a good compact habit, the attractive white flowers are followed by large black fruits that persist until spring, and superb red fall color.
$19.00

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Asimina triloba

Asimina triloba

Pawpaw, grown for its tropical looking foliage, large flowers, edible tasty fruits and most of all to attract Zebra Swallowtail butterflies. These amazingly long tailed butterflies eat nothing else as larvae. If they don't find you, go out and net a few females, bring them home and release them. They are seldom virgins when you catch them and will usually start a colony as long as sufficient food is available and you introduce a bit of genetic diversity. Releasing a single female is not likely to be successful. Don’t panic unduly about upsetting ecosystems, butterflies are often blown hundreds of miles outside their natural range, netting a few and moving them changes little.
$19.00

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Aucuba japonica 'Seven Hills' smaller

Aucuba japonica 'Seven Hills' smaller

A great little cornaceous plant from Japan, evergreen with attractive red berries, these were sent to us by a customer from a hardy northern source.
$19.00

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Aesculus hippocastanum

Aesculus hippocastanum

Horse chestnut can be spectacular in the right setting they get huge 100’ tall and nearly as wide with very showy panicles of flowers. They are best viewed from a distance and planted in moist soils to avoid the late summer ugly leaf problems, the nuts are pretty much useless but kids do love to throw them, mostly at each other.
$24.00

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Aesculus parviflora (seedling of Roger's)

Aesculus parviflora (seedling of Roger's)

Considered to be the largest flowered of all the bottlebrush types rodgers comes quite true from seed, culture is the same as for the species. this is one of my faverite shade plants.
$24.00

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Aesculus pavia

Aesculus pavia

My favorite dwarf buckeye and an important parent of many of the red hybrids. It is quite variable even in the wild, most specimens are under 20’ in height however specimens over 60 ft are known to exist.
$24.00

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