null Skip to main content
Wholesale Starter Plants | Perennials | Ornamental Grasses
Our Availability is Always Fresh!

Blog

Raise Your Grass Game. Strike Gold! Sorghastrum nutans Golden Sunset™ PPAF

Raise Your Grass Game. Strike Gold! Sorghastrum nutans Golden Sunset™ PPAF

Posted by John Friel on Oct 24th 2022

Looking to enhance your ornamental grass selection? Native to the American prairie, Sorghastrum makes itself at home in any sunny border.Golden Sunset™ is a warm-season grass that forms neat clumps of wide, olive-green blades. Shapely and graceful, it has an upright/arching habit. Full, rich golden plumes rise to an impressive, but not overwhelming, height. Golden Sunset™ is a warm-season grass that forms neat clumps of wide, olive-green blades. Shapely and graceful, it has an upright/archi
Chasmanthium latifolium “Northern sea oats”

Chasmanthium latifolium “Northern sea oats”

Posted by John Friel on Mar 30th 2022

Here’s an interesting native grass: Its foliage reminds you of bamboo. Its highly-decorative seed heads look like oats. Emerging green, they turn purple/bronze in summer and finally tawny in fall and winter.Chasmanthium tolerates more shade than most ornamental grasses. It’s also juglone tolerant, so even the notoriously unfriendly shade under black walnut trees is available for gardening.Those pendulous seed heads are dazzling in late-afternoon sunlight. At any color stage, they make a fabulous
A Fountain of Choices!  (Pennisetum )

A Fountain of Choices! (Pennisetum )

Posted by John Friel on Feb 8th 2022

We grow over two dozen varieties of this multifaceted, cosmopolitan genus. Why so many? Because no two are alike. Let’s inventory their assets and characteristics.Size: Our fountain grass offerings range from awww!-some cuties like ‘Little Bunny’, a mere 10 – 12” tall, all the way up to statuesque six-footers in the Royal Collection.Foliage: Name it! At one end of the color spectrum is the bright chartreuse of P. alopecuroides 'Yellow Ribbons’. On the dark side are the Royals, with big, rippling
Acorus Line

Acorus Line

Posted by John Friel on Feb 16th 2021

Answer:Duct tape. A screwdriver. Bacon. Acorus gramineus.Question:What are four versatile home problem-solvers?Acorus can’t patch your canoe, open paint cans or make everything it touches delicious.But it can beautify just about any moist spot in your garden -- sunny, shady or in-between. Duct tape can’t fix that.It looks great in containers, too. How pretty is a pot full of screwdrivers?The common name “sweet flag” refers to the scent given off when the foliage is bruised. OK, bacon wins this o

Subscribe to our newsletter

Subscribe to receive the latest in plant trends and availability!