pastures
Showing 1–12 of 16 results
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Aquilegia canadensis (eastern columbine)
$8.00Eastern columbines of all kinds! Little Lanterns is dwarf and compact, standard (available later 2025) is what you’re used to seeing.
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Asclepias tuberosa (orange butterfly milkweed)
$10.00 – $15.00 Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page -
Capnoides sempervirens (rock harlequin)
$6.00As an annual, rock harlequin will grow quickly and put out blooms in the first year, re-seeding into your garden to come back year after year.
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Carex glaucodea (blue sedge)
$6.00Bunny Blue Hobb isn’t the only blue sedge in town. Carex glaucodea, actually called blue sedge, commonly grows in damp shady eastern woodlands.
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Claytonia virginica (spring beauty)
$5.00 – $12.00Edible spring ephemeral that provides an early food source for pollinators, including the specialist spring beauty miner.
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Corylus americana (American hazelnut)
$18.00Seed-grown American hazelnut, also known as the American filbert, is a keystone species that produces choice edible nuts.
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Danthonia spicata (poverty oatgrass)
$6.00One of the top performing grasses in Cornell’s native lawn demonstration area, try replacing your exotic turf with our native Danthonia spicata.
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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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Phlox paniculata (garden phlox)
$8.00These garden phlox are not cultivars, but grown from seed obtained from open pollinated and naturalized plants. Mystery color, and maybe a new winner!