Ferns

Ferns are wonderful for the shaded woodland garden, blending gentle textures and forms in a green tapestry with little need of gaudy colors; they are the perfect foil for trilliums and native orchids. Some species will provide something green where little else stands a chance of growing due to low light levels and adverse moisture conditions. Essential for shady waterfall gardens and shaded rock gardens, ferns provide graceful fillers and accents all over the garden. They impart a sense of calm to the landscape and intrigue us as their fiddleheads unfurl. Despite their delicate appearance, ferns are tough and adaptable plants, most species are easy to grow as long as their wants are understood. They haven't survived for as long as they have without being quite adaptable. With a bit of help from Dr Storer we finally got around to upgrading our rather pathetic fern listing, the new additions are either spore grown, or tissue cultured, primarily from Mickel’s collection but also from Judith Jones and other well-known fern growers.



Product Image Item Name- Price
Osmunda regalis Royal Fern

Osmunda regalis Royal Fern

A large species that prefers to dangle its toes in the water, growing to over 6' tall and occasionally as much as 10’; mass plantings have an almost prehistoric nature, just the thing for landscaping Komodo dragon pens.
$8.00

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Osmunda regalis var spectabilis

Osmunda regalis var spectabilis

An American ford of this widespread species with thinner more widely spaced segments then in variety regalis. It is also a shorter plant.
$19.00

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Polypody virginianum

Polypody virginianum

At its best growing on rotting moss covered logs, or rocks, we have them in a woodland trough with trilliums, Shortia, and Cypripedium, and they are outstanding.
$8.00

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Polystichum setiferum 'Plumosomultilobum'

Polystichum setiferum 'Plumosomultilobum'

The perfect landscape fern for the shady side of your local nuclear power plant. You would be hard pressed to find a more mutant looking fern. The bizarre three-dimensional layered fronds are strange as hell; you need this. It is my current favorite fern and better still it propagates by frond cuttings if you are patient (play a little Gun’s and Roses, kick back and whistle along)
$19.00

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Polystichum setiferum 'Rotundatum Cristatum'

Polystichum setiferum 'Rotundatum Cristatum'

A strong growing upright selection with magnificent ram’s-head cresting at the ends of the fronds and bulbils scattered along the rachis. Setiferum has long been one of my favorite ferns and this is the best crested-form of setiferum I’ve seen to date.
$19.00

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Thelypteris noveboracensis

Thelypteris noveboracensis

New York Fern, An easy but somewhat invasive fern that deer seem to leave alone, it is pretty in a naturalized setting .
$12.00

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Thelyptesris phegopteri

Thelyptesris phegopteri

Northern beech fern is one of my favorites with elegant fronds and a well behaved nature it grows on moist, calcareous cliff crevices or moist banks in rich, damp forest floors; also found on floodplain sites. A circumborial species common near Lake Superior .
$12.00

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