M. virginiana is not the most well known native but ‘Moonglow’ may be a selection that changes all that. Vigorous growing and disease resistant, ‘Moonglow’ has big, deep green foliage that covers this wide, rounded plant, providing a superb backdrop to massive, creamy-white, fragrant flowers that emerge continually from June through the rest of the summer. This tree makes a large but beautiful specimen and also provides tons of shelter for nesting native birds along with an invaluable food source from the red berries contained in the big seed pods this plant produces. ‘Moonglow’ tolerates moist soils and will grow well in full sun or partial shade.

Compact and multi-stemmed, this Cary Award winner heralds the onset of spring weather with white, tinged pink flowers with strap-like petals that reach over 5″ in diameter emerging in mid- to late April. Easy to grow with dark green, lustrous foliage.

Dwarf perennial bearing spikes of pea-like white flowers in early and midsummer among fern-like foliage. Compact form and full-sized flowers make this perennial a great choice for mixed perennial beds.

Dwarf perennial bearing spikes of pea-like blue and white flowers in early and midsummer among fern-like foliage. Compact form and full-sized flowers make this perennial a great choice for mixed perennial beds.

This one has it all! Purity of white, texture, a bold vertical statement. A rich blend of ivory and pure white, with the tiniest hint of cream. Plant it in drifts and let the well-filled spires mingle with Iris, Allium, and other sun-loving perennials.

Thunderbolt™ is an award-winning new Box Honeysuckle featuring flashy chartreuse foliage with an improved, dense, midsize frame. Let it naturally cascade for focal interest or shape it to taste. Because of its smaller leaf size and dense form, Thunderbolt™ makes a great boxwood hedge replacement in part sun landscapes.

This high yielding selection produces very big fruit – up to 1.5″ long and 0.5″ wide. Use as a companion plant to Sugar Mountain® Blue for improved fruiting. 

Easy to grow backyard fruit! Hardy, and much more adaptable than blueberries, this native shrub produces abundant sweet fruits up to 1″ long and 0.5″ wide. This is an excellent pollinator for Sugar Mountain Blue haskap; best fruiting will occur when two varieties are planted together.

Color all season is this vigorous vine’s calling card. Deep green, red tinged foliage flushes in the spring followed by bunches of buds that open in late May revealing a tubular, striking bi-color flower that is purplish-red on the outside and creamy white on the inside. Fragrant flowers bloom deliciously throughout the summer followed by clusters of brilliant red berries in the fall.