Northern-Piedmont Native
If you garden based on local ecotype rather than political borders, these are listed as native for the Piedmont region based on BPlant lists.
Showing 1–12 of 44 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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Agastache scrophulariifolia (purple giant hyssop)
$10.00 Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page -
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 albicans (white-tinted sedge)
$6.00It would seem that no matter what you throw at it, this tough little sedge can handle it.
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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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Cerastium arvense ssp. stricta (large-flowered meadow chickweed)
$8.00This native chickweed has showy fragrant blooms in spring and is drought tolerant once established.