Dense, compact, rounded evergreen with steel blue foliage color that is irresistible year round. Dwarf, very slow growing specimen plant. Drought tolerant once established. Very hardy! A colorful, textural masterpiece! Foliage and form are outstanding. Perfect for foundation, rock garden, or specimen use. Very hardy. Deer resistant.

A truly unique conifer specimen! Bold blue color and dramatic upright, weeping form make this evergreen irresistable as a patio, specimen or landscape plant. Great for making a bold statement in a tight area or for a striking specimen plant in any sunny area. Deer resistant.

If you love Blue Spruce, this is the Blue Spruce you are thinking about! It differs from the species because of its consistent steel blue color and its dense, tight slow growing form and it’s a difference that will take you breath away! You’ll be astounded by the color show it puts on and also by the much smaller footprint it holds in the landscape, a distinct advantage over the species. ‘Fat Albert’ loves full sun and, even though it is smaller and slower growing, it should avoid being planted too close to houses and electrical wiring.

Get your seasonal color started with a terrific spring groundcover. Having a compact growing habit with vibrant violet blue flowers, you will see color creep and spread slowly throughout the landscape. Drought tolerant so would be ideal for your rock garden or on slopes.

Shiny green, needle-like foliage forms an evergreen mat. Looks especially pretty draped over rock walls. Masses of blue flowers begin flowering in late April. Perfect for massing in sun or part shade. It’s a magnet for butterflies, hummingbirds and native insects.

This plant is not picky, it just needs to be noticed. You’d have to be pretty oblivious not to notice it starting in late April through May when its dense, ground hugging form and dark, needle-like foliage are obscured by medium blue flowers putting on a memorable show. ‘Emerald Blue’ loves well-drained soil, tolerates poor fertility well, and is deer resistant.

This terrific native lights up a sunny or shady area in the late spring with a plethora of lilac-blue flowers from mid-May through June. With its spreading, mounding form, this is a great plant to group together to fill large areas with fantastic bloom along with that great Phlox scent.

A true color chameleon, you’ll wonder if it is the same plant from day to day in your garden during its summer bloom. Upright with stiff stems, ‘Blue Paradise’ forms a column of deep green foliage and stems that tops itself with an extended dome of flower buds in late June. These buds enlarge and open in early July to form rounded heads of light blue flowers that are scented and loaded with sweet butterfly and hummingbird satisfying nectar. The flowers are attractive enough but they suddenly become even more attractive as, day by day, they darken to a deep violet-blue and then to violet-red giving you an ever changing pallette of color that you will cherish. Plant ‘Blue Paradise’ in groups toward the back of any garden and make sure you provide it with full sun and ample airflow. ‘Blue Paradise’ has great mildew tolerance but still needs the great air flow to keep this fungus at bay

Sometimes gardeners think that the only good plant is the newest plant from the hottest breeder. ‘Blue Moon’, a superb native plant discovered by Bill Cullina at the New England Wildflower society, shows you that tremendous plants can come from anywhere. ‘Blue Moon’ emerges early in the season to form a loose, tumbling, trailing mass that covers itself with buds by early April and bloom by late April. And what a bloom!! Profuse numbers of deep violet-blue flowers conceal the foliage they are so numerous creating a cloud of color well into May. Add in this plant’s tremendous flower scent and the fact that ‘Blue Moon’ is absolutely perfect for semi-shaded and shaded areas and you have a tough yet tender early spring bloomer that will charm you every year.

Here’s a Perovskia that doesn’t get too tall, has stronger stems and a more upright habit than most. Its aromatic, grey-green leaves are entirely like those of ‘Little Spire’, clinging to the silvery stems.