A native charmer, you’ll love this plant’s unbridled desire to keep on blooming as pale yellow clusters of trumpet shaped flowers just keep on coming from June until October. Deep green, leathery, disease resistant foliage serves as a great backdrop to blooms that hummingbirds and butterflies eagerly seek out. Bright orange berries add to the show in the fall.

A vigorous growing selection with fragrant, summer long-blooming yellow flowers backed by eye-catching blue-green foliage. A great show of bright red berries follow flowers and are great for attracting birds.

Dense and full, this extremely hardy shrub is an easy care wonder with a surprisingly tasty fruit. Showy, white, fragrant flowers bloom in early May followed by deep blue, elongated, profuse blueberry-like fruit in late  July. Needs a 2nd variety for pollination.

Yezberry® Maxie™ Japanese haskap is a truly tasty berry that just about anyone can grow. Yellow flowers appear in very early spring (it will almost certainly be the first thing to bloom in your landscape each year) and develop into luscious blue berries in early summer. No spraying or fussy pruning is required to get a harvest of fruit so tasty, you’ll want to eat it as fast as you can pluck them from the stems. This exceptionally hardy shrub grows well in sun or part shade and doesn’t need any special soil in order to thrive. Plant Yezberry Maxie haskap within 50’/15.2 m of another Yezberry® variety to ensure an abundant fruit set.

New to American shores, this bush form of Honeysuckle is native to eastern Siberia. ‘Blue Belle’™ offers a sweet, easy to grow treat in the form of oodles of dark blue, oblong, almost Blueberry-tasting berries that mature in June. This fruit is perfect for fresh eating by the handful or sprinkled on your favorite early summer treat like ice cream for an even sweeter rush of flavor. ‘Blue Belle’™ is a dense, rounded shrub with tight branching that holds deep green, elongated foliage. Small, white flowers bloom along its branches in April while foliage is emerging leading to the incredible array of fruit that quickly matures by late spring. ‘Blue Belle’™ loves full sun and well-drained soil and is as tough as nails as you might expect with its Siberian heritage. Plant another selection nearby for best pollination and fruit set although you will get some fruit if planted alone.

Incredibly hardy, this fruit comes to us via Siberia so you can bet it stands up to harsh conditions! Late April bloom leads to vast quantities of long, deep blue berries that can be eaten fresh or dried and are high in antioxidants

Those wet landscape spots sure can be difficult to make beautiful. It’s a good thing that native plants like Blue Cardinal Flower are around to fill and beautify spots that could be such eyesores without them. This selection has vigor that belies its tough growing conditions with strongly upright plants sporting medium green colored, long, lance-like foliage. Plants continue to grow upward as summer approaches, topping themselves with numerous long flower stalks. The buds on these stalks open in early summer revealing prominently lower lipped blue blooms that are striking to you and to all the butterflies and hummingbirds that will visit for a nectar snack. This selection will bloom throughout the summer and will thrive along streams and ponds even if their feet stay a little wetter than most other plants can tolerate. Why such a strange species name you might ask?? This native was used in years past as a folklore venereal disease cure giving it its unique species name!

You’ll find this classic American Beauties plant growing naturally in moist, swampy areas, but with a constantly moist soil it will thrive in your landscape and put on a stunning summer show. Plant it toward the back of the garden or around wetland features and in groups to put on the best show as this plant forms a dense clump of upright stems crowded with almost fleshy, medium green foliage. Buds form at the tops of these stems and give rise to a profuse amount of scarlet-red, two lipped tubular flowers in late July continuing right into September. Humming_birds find these flowers an irresistible source of nectar as do colorful butterflies like swallowtails, while spent flower heads and stems provide nesting to birds and cover for small native animals and insects.

Massive , deep green, fan-like foliage cascades off an central stem to create a fat, full plant that will enliven any landscape or deck with its outstanding texture and uniqueness Unique foliage. Easy to grow with a texture that is impossible to match in the landscape. Performs well in a container on a deck and will thrive even planted in a well drained garden location.

Dark green foliage with racemes of lavender flowers followed by blue-black berry-like fruit. August.