Search Results for: shasta daisy

Shasta Daisy – Alaska

Attractive, large, white, single daisy flowers with yellow centers. Ideal for perennial and landscape borders. Popular as a cut flower.

Shasta Daisy – Little Princess, Semi-Dwarf

An ideal variety for bedding areas, plants do not take up as much space as standard Shasta daisies. Great for edgings and permanent landscape borders or as an accent combined with other flowers. Makes great, long lasting cut flowers.

Wildflowers for Alaska and Cold Weather Areas

Wildflowers suitable to Alaska and other areas with cold climates. This easy-to-grow mixture of colorful annual, biennial, and perennial species will give you a range of different looks throughout the growing season, and many varieties will live over to give you a permanent wildflower garden.

This mix includes, depending on availability, some species pictured and many others, such as: Yarrow, Alyssum, Bachelor Buttons, Wallflower, Shasta Daisy, Foxglove, Gilia, Blue and Scarlet Flax, Maltese Cross, Nemophila, Evening Primrose, Iceland Poppy, Penstemon, Black-Eyed Susans, Forget-Me-Nots, Lupine, Bellflower, Viola, Columbine, Clarkia, Snow in Summer, Rocket Larkspur, and Nodding Catchfly.

Hummingbird, Butterfly, and Bee Mix – Pollinator Flower Garden

A colorful and attractive selection of flowers designed to help attract Hummingbirds and Butterflies to your garden. Included in the mix depending upon availability are: Butterfly Milkweed, Columbine, Calendula, Bachelor Buttons, Clarkia, Delphinium, Dianthus, Foxglove, Candytuft, Gayfeater, Lupine, Maltese Cross, Four O’Clocks, Forget Me Nots, Nicotania, Evening Primrose, Penstemon, Phlox, Salvia, Nasturtium, Zinnia, Shasta Daisy, Coreopsis, Cosmos, Sunflower, Alyssum, Phacella, Marigold, Viola, Gaillardia, Monarda, Coneflower, Clover, and Meadowfoam.

Wildflowers for the Pacific Northwest

An easy to grow colorful mixture of native and naturalized flowers. Includes approximately 24 species of annuals, perennials, and biennials, growing up to 3 feet in height. Many varieties will live over or reseed ensuring a permanent wildflower garden of your own. Please note: our packets contain no fillers, only wildflower seed.

Top Garden Projects for July

It’s time to sit back and enjoy the garden. Take time to enjoy the fruits of your earlier gardening efforts. July is usually one of the best months weather-wise, and a time when little needs to be done to keep the garden in tip-top shape.

Purple Coneflower – Echinacea

Long lasting large purple flowers on tall robust plants. Its long stems make it ideal for cut flower bouquets. Native to the central eastern United States, it is somewhat drought resistant once established. Ideal for mass plantings in larger gardens, it also combines well with other tall perennials such as Shasta and Gloriosa daisies.