Filter Sort
Sort

Sort By :

By :

Ascending
Descending
Grid View
List View
Full Shade All Of South Florida Except The Keys Clear all
Default image
Sorghastrum nutans
This was one of the important grasses of the mid-western prairies. Survives occasional flooding and repeated burning. Plant in the rear of a wildflower garden. The flower/fuit stalk is quite showy with a golden plume (the stamens are yellow)in mid-fall. The stems and fruit retain a golden straw color through the fall. The remainder of the year, the grass is much lower (about 2 ft) and blue-green in color.
  • Rapid growth
  • Decorative diamond-shaped trunk pattern
  • Unique swollen blue-green to silver trunk
  • Drought tolerant
Default image
Itea virginica
While occurring naturally in wetlands, this plant makes a good shrub in reasonably moist uplands. Use as a background plant in moist, shady areas. Charming when planted along a stream. Blooms are showy, longlasting. Has a tendency to produce suckers, so best planted where it can be contained.
  • Arched, recurving fronds
  • Cold tolerant
  • Formal, old-world appearance
  • Long-lived perennial