pollen for bees
Showing 1–12 of 15 results
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Agastache nepetoides (yellow giant hyssop)
$10.00Unlike anise hyssop, a popular near-native, yellow giant hyssop is one of two native hyssops in Pennsylvania, displaying creamy yellow flowers.
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Cerastium arvense ssp. stricta (large-flowered meadow chickweed)
$8.00This native chickweed has showy fragrant blooms in spring and is drought tolerant once established.
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Fragaria virginiana (wild strawberry)
$8.00 – $25.00The native wild strawberry provides delicious, edible fruit, and its dense spreading growth helps to suppress weeds as a living mulch.
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Hypoxis hirsuta (eastern yellow star grass)
$6.00Blue-eyed grass’s golden-flowered cousin, the eastern yellow star grass is a welcome volunteer in gardens with grass-like leaves and bright blooms.
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Ilex opaca
$8.00 – $16.00American holly trees are extremely slow-growing trees. However, as a keystone species, it is worth growing at least one or two on your property.
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Lupinus perennis (sundial lupines)
$8.00Sundial lupines are the only lupines native to the mid-atlantic and northeastern region. These are the host plants for the endangered Karner Blue butterfly.
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Podophyllum peltatum (mayapple, American mandrake)
$10.00This spring ephemeral groundcover has a close association with the state-vulnerable eastern box turtle, which favors its fruit and disperses it in the wild.
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Potentilla canadensis (running five-fingers)
$6.00Cute yellow-flowering ground cover that doubles a native lawn alternative that can grow in a wide variety of conditions, including full sun and drought.
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Rhexia virginica (meadow beauty)
$10.00Attractive, colorful groundcover for sunny to light shade moist gardens that attracts pollinators and provides interest through the seasons.