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Product Image Item Name- Price
Silphium integrifolium

Silphium integrifolium

Love siphium, but don't have space for the really GIANT ones? This one is merely 3-5 feet tall, with the same large, dramatic leaves and relatively large yellow sunflower-like blooms in mid to late summer.Interesting fact, while googling about I found reference to silphium producing a fragrant resin while in flower that can be used as chewing gum. Who knew? Zone 5 Joseph
$15.00

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Smilacina racemosa

Smilacina racemosa

Husky woodland plants of considerable beauty, the arching stems of False Solomon's Seal carry fluffy white flowers in plume like terminal racemes followed by berries like vitrified drops of bright blood in autumn. Smilacina too has some Asian counterparts, which are great garden plants.____ZONE 4
$12.00

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Smilacina racemosa dwarf (Maianthemum stellatum ssp. Crassum)

Smilacina racemosa dwarf (Maianthemum stellatum ssp. Crassum)

Maianthemum stellatum var. crassum An amazing little thing glaucous blue almost succulent foliage on plants just a few inches high, it wanders around in the garden making a tuft here and a tuft there and is extremely cute. I had admired this in Fred Case's garden for years and finally begged a piece several years ago. We have slowly built up stock and finally have enough to offer. I consider it one of the choicest plants in our woodland garden.____ZONE 4
$19.00

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Solidago cutleri

Solidago cutleri

Horribly confused with Solidago brachystachys and Solidago virgaurea by any name it is a cute little dwarf golden rod. It is an eastern American tufted species found at altitude with showy corymbs of yellow flowers atop short stems in late summer.____ZONE 5
$12.00

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Solidago rigida

Solidago rigida

$12.00

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Spigelia marilandica

Spigelia marilandica

A unique looking and hardy Eastern American member of the Loganacaea, they prefer a moist humus rich soil and a bit of shade; flowers, which appear in mid to early summer, are narrow trumpets to 5cm scarlet outside and yellow inside with a constriction just before they flare out.
$12.00

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Stachys byzantina 'Silver Carpet'

Stachys byzantina 'Silver Carpet'

This is supposed to be the best of the non-flowering Lamb's Ears, it has been known to throw the occasional spike of magenta flowers but is generally flower free.
$12.00

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Stachys lavendulifolia

Stachys lavendulifolia

By far my favorite Stachys, these are from Mojmir's collections at 1700m on the sandy hills near Horsan, Turkey; flowers are mauve in whorls up the stems, subtended by dissected fuzzy bracts giving a smoky appearance from a distance. A legendary plant and difficult, at least in the Mid West, it detests too much wet, melting without warning, definitely not for beginners.
$15.00

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Stachys macrantha 'Hummelo'

Stachys macrantha 'Hummelo'

Dense short spikes of hot magenta flowers arise from dense slow spreading mats of dark green leaves, delightful.
$12.00

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Streptopus obtusatus

Streptopus obtusatus

An extremely rare plant, and one you woud be forgiven for mistaking for a particularly lovely polygonatum. Small white flowers in the spring, very solomon's seal like, spreading moderately by rhizomes, the real show here is the incredibly glossy green foliage that has an impossible to photograph faintly metalic bluish sheen to it. Lovely and different for the woodland garden. Two feet tall. Zone 5.
$15.00

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