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Rose Bushes

Angel Face Rose

Baby Love Rose

Betty Prior Rose

Blaze Rose

Bonica Rose

Carefee Delight Rose

Carefree Beauty Rose

Champlain Rose

Chuckles Rose

Cuthbert Grant Rose

Day Breaker Rose

Don Juan Rose

Double Delight Rose

Easy Going Rose

Fire Meidiland Rose

Fourth of July Rose

Gertrude Jekyll Rose

Golden Showers Rose

Henry Hudson Rose

Henry Kelsey CL Rose

Honey Perfume Rose

Iceberg Climbing Rose

Iceburg Rose

Ingrid Bergman Rose

Intrigue Rose

John Franklin Rose

Josephs Coat Rose

Just Joey Rose

Knock Out Rose

Lagerfeld Rose

Livin Easy Rose

Memorial Day Rose

Nearly Wild Rose

New Dawn Rose

Paradise Rose

Peace Rose

Pillow Fight Rose

Pink Knock Out Rose

Playboy Rose

Purezza Rose

Rambling Red Rose

Seafoam Rose

Silver Star Rose

The Dark Lady Rose

The Fairy Rose

Trumpeter Rose

WWII Memorial Rose Rose

William Baffin Rose

Zephirine Drouhin Rose


The Sunflower First Light, ‘Helianthus salicifolius,’ produces a mass of two-inch, daisy-like light yellow flowers. Its fuzzy, linear green leaves will make a wonderful contrast with the flowers.

This Blooms of Bressingham plant grows to a mature height of four feet with a spread of twenty-eight inches. The blooms make excellent cut flowers.

This plant looks great in the back of beds or borders as well as with ornamental grasses or asters. The seeds produced are eaten by birds. This sunflower will give an explosion of color to any perennial garden.


The Heuchera Purple Petticoats, ‘Heuchera micrantha,’ is also known as the Coral Bell or Alumroot. This plant is a robust, stocky Heuchera that is easy to grow and reliable. They are simply superb plants.

This is destined to become one of the best from the entire line of coral bells. The ruffled leaves are rich chocolate with bright burgundy undersides.

They should be grown in combos with purple, yellow and red plants. Be the envy of your neighbors with these colorful plants.


The Grass Big Bluestem, ‘Andropogon gerardii,’ is a prairie grass native to North America. This grass is sometimes referred to as Turkey Feet, due to the shape of the seed heads.

The name Big Bluestem comes from the fact that this grass can become very big, possibly reaching four to seven feet in height.

The twelve inch long blades are hairy and ½ inch wide. The leaves will get a slight red tinge as they age, and become bronze in the autumn. This is a very attractive grass that works well for either accent or mass plantings.