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Product Image Item Name- Price
Salvia azurea

Salvia azurea

One of my very favorite plants, a plains native that produces dense heads of large, beautiful, to-die-for true blue flowers in late summer and fall. Tough, carefree, and drought tolerant, the only problem with this plant is that the 2-3 foot stems tend to want to sprawl and trail rather than stand up straight. If you really need them to be tidy and compact, cut them back early in the summer to promote branching, or better yet, space them around with other plants so the lax stems can trail here and there, displaying their perfectly sky blue flowers wherever strikes their fancy. Zone 4
$15.00

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Sanguinaria canadensis

Sanguinaria canadensis

Lovely blue gray leaves daintily lobed and scalloped with large flowers of transparent opalescent white, like the ghost of some huge anemone on 6 to 9" stems. Besides the famous fully double form, Bloodroot often has light pink or extra petaled forms, as well and plants with heavily dissected leaves.
$8.00

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Sanguinaria canadensis multiplex

Sanguinaria canadensis multiplex

One of the most beautiful spring wildflowers the double forms of bloodroot are legendary. The huge fully double flowers are much less ephemeral than the single forms. We have a couple of clones that differ primarily in bloom time, opening a week or so apart. This is the early clone. We have had clumps of this disappear from the garden with the holes neatly filled in and the leaf litter carefully sifted back. Clever woodchucks?
$29.00

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Sanguisorba officianalis 'Shiro Fururin'

Sanguisorba officianalis 'Shiro Fururin'

A rarely available white variegated form form Japan; it has been stable for us although rather slow growing.
$12.00

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Sanguisorba officianalis 'Tanna'

Sanguisorba officianalis 'Tanna'

A dwarf form of Great Burnet, the compact 10” mounds of foliage are topped by myriads of burgundy heads on short stems, thanks to Dan for making it available to American gardeners.____ZONE 4
$12.00

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Saururus chinensis

Saururus chinensis

The Asian counterpart of our native Lizard's Tail with spikes of ivory flowers, collecting Asian versions of American natives has become popular of late, (collectors often hold meetings and chant 'Reunite Gondwanaland' while shooting into the air with AK-47's). However, I digress, taxonomically the two are separated by the position of the anthers in chinensis they are held below the stigmas, in cernuus they are held above.____ZONE 6
$12.00

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