Trillium




Product Image Item Name Price+
Trillium cuneatum 'Sessile of Hort.' Qty 24

Trillium cuneatum 'Sessile of Hort.' Qty 24

Toad Shade, I love the name; I just wish my toads would use them. Large mottled leaves with red flowers in the axil. Flowers are not as sweet as luteum but who cares, a must for every collection. Cuneatum has been widely sold under the name sessile for years.
$120.75

Add:

Trillium erectum Qty 24

Trillium erectum Qty 24

A wide ranging eastern species typically with maroon red flowers on a stem above the leaves, it forms stunning hybrids with flexipes and indeed is so precocious with other plants in it's section that it can be hard to find a completely pure strain. According to Fred Case, red forms are more common at higher elevations.
$120.75

Add:

Trillium grandiflorum Qty 24

Trillium grandiflorum Qty 24

It's a weed here but a glorious one, the huge white flowers fade to pink as they age; good pink forms and doubles are legendary, At least some of the pinks seem to breed true from seed, doubles are another matter but they are starting to tissue culture some of them. If you wish to search for doubles look at the end of the season, the doubles tend to bloom later and hold their petals longer than the singles, making them stand out at a considerable distance.
$120.75

Add:

Trillium luteum Qty 24

Trillium luteum Qty 24

A large yellow trillium similar to trillium cuneatum but with large sweet smelling yellow flowers sitting in the center of the mottled leaves, Luteum and cuneatum will hybridize and to confuse the matter further there are yellow forms of cuneatum and red forms of luteum. Luteum has a lemon scent, while cuneatum is more like Calycanthus, and some of the hybrids have a wonderful apple scent. It is restricted to a rather narrow range near the North Carolina Tennessee border but is very adaptable to gardens outside its range.
$120.75

Add:

Trillium recurvatum Qty 24

Trillium recurvatum Qty 24

Small, maroon red, reflexed petals, a very unusual trillium, and almost impossible to misidentify, Prairie Trillium seems to prefer clay floodplain soils or rich woods over limestone. It is easy and long lived in the garden.
$120.75

Add:

Trillium sulcatum (mixed colors) Qty 24

Trillium sulcatum (mixed colors) Qty 24

We are delighted to be able to offer some spectacular mixed color forms of sulcatum. These are some of the showiest trilliums we have ever grown (sulcatum from the type locality is a rather small flowered thing hardly worth growing)
$179.75

Add:

Trillium cuneatum 'Sessile of Hort.' Qty 48

Trillium cuneatum 'Sessile of Hort.' Qty 48

Toad Shade, I love the name; I just wish my toads would use them. Large mottled leaves with red flowers in the axil. Flowers are not as sweet as luteum but who cares, a must for every collection. Cuneatum has been widely sold under the name sessile for years.
$198.75

Add:

Trillium erectum Qty 48

Trillium erectum Qty 48

A wide ranging eastern species typically with maroon red flowers on a stem above the leaves, it forms stunning hybrids with flexipes and indeed is so precocious with other plants in it's section that it can be hard to find a completely pure strain. According to Fred Case, red forms are more common at higher elevations.
$198.75

Add:

Trillium grandiflorum Qty 48

Trillium grandiflorum Qty 48

It's a weed here but a glorious one, the huge white flowers fade to pink as they age; good pink forms and doubles are legendary, At least some of the pinks seem to breed true from seed, doubles are another matter but they are starting to tissue culture some of them. If you wish to search for doubles look at the end of the season, the doubles tend to bloom later and hold their petals longer than the singles, making them stand out at a considerable distance..
$198.75

Add:

Trillium luteum Qty 48

Trillium luteum Qty 48

A large yellow trillium similar to trillium cuneatum but with large sweet smelling yellow flowers sitting in the center of the mottled leaves, Luteum and cuneatum will hybridize and to confuse the matter further there are yellow forms of cuneatum and red forms of luteum. Luteum has a lemon scent, while cuneatum is more like Calycanthus, and some of the hybrids have a wonderful apple scent. It is restricted to a rather narrow range near the North Carolina Tennessee border but is very adaptable to gardens outside its range.
$198.75

Add: