Well adapted native annual wildflower to the plains states. Blooms first year into late summer.
| Grow Height | Bloom Period | Growing Regions | Planting Rate Acre |
Bloom Color |
| 1½-2′ | May-Sept | all | 10 PLS | Red/Yellow |
$37.50 /lbs. (pounds)
Well adapted native annual wildflower to the plains states. Blooms first year into late summer.
7 in stock
Well adapted native annual wildflower to the plains states. Blooms first year into late summer.
| Grow Height | Bloom Period | Growing Regions | Planting Rate Acre |
Bloom Color |
| 1½-2′ | May-Sept | all | 10 PLS | Red/Yellow |
| Weight | 1 lbs |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 6 × 6 × 6 in |
You must be logged in to post a review.
Native to Texas and many or the plains and mountain states. Often found growing in shallow soils, preferring disturbed sites in dry, sandy or gravelly soil with a neutral PH.
Perennial plant that is a Dicot or easier said a bean. Native from Southern Canada to New Mexico. Likes full sun, dry to medium moisture soils.
Native to Central Great Plains and Southern Midwest, found on low-lying sites or ditches. Full sun. Has a long bloom season and is one of the best native annual wildflowers.
Large, bright flowers that is a popular flower. Use in wildflowers or ground cover mixtures. Fast growing. Red and mixed colors available.
Ground cover native to Southern Midwest. Drought tolerant. Flowers its 2nd year. Hardy perennial.
Showy blue and white flowers with some other colors from pink to lavender identified in select locations. Must be planted in the fall for spring blooms.
Stiff goldenrod occurs in open woods, glades, thickets and prairies. Features tiny, bright yellow, daisy like flowers in dense, erect, flat-topped terminal clusters.
Stout, sparingly branched, pubescent perennial, with large, oval, blue-green leaves and showy, spherical clusters of rose-colored flowers.
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.