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Want to revive your landscaping? Beat the spring-time rush and schedule a 1-on-1 meeting with one of our designers.
Shop NowBanner images by Freepik.
Lustrous, leathery semi-evergreen fronds are dark green and emerge early in spring.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Large brown fiddleheads in spring followed by deep green fronds are features of this strong growing and vigorous species.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Dark green, pinnate fronds are wide at the top and tapering down to a bare strip. Typically grows 2-3 feet in cultivation but may reach 6 feet in moist, cool climates.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Vibrant burgundy stems contrast beautifully with the lacy, mint green fronds.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Fronds have a dainty and delicate appearance.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
A compact tickseed with golden-yellow, daisy-like blooms.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
A compact tickseed with golden-yellow blooms measuring 2 or 2.5 inches wide.
Photos courtesy Longfield Gardens.
A classic purple coneflower cultivar with very fragrant rose-pink ray petals surrounding a coppery-brown, spiky central cone.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Showy, daisy-like flowers on stiff, coarse stems that thrive in prairies, meadows, and open woodlands.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Hello Yellow is hybridized from the native Butterfly Weed and is covered with golden yellow flowers in July.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Very showy clusters of bright orange flowers that appear atop stems lined with green strap-like leaves. Large seed heads release silky-tailed seeds in the fall.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Baptisia produces large spires of violet-blue flowers in late spring on a rounded mound of foliage that remains attractive throughout the season.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Rich purple mounds of daisy-like blossoms put on a spectacular show in autumn.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
This bushy, compact plant produces huge amounts of semi-double lilac blue flowers from late summer to early autumn.
Photos courtesy Minor's Garden Center.
Vibrant magenta-red flowers with yellow centers cover this compact plant for late season color.
Photos courtesy White Flower Farm.
Covered with deep purple blooms from August to September, this perennial will naturalize and prefer moist soils.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Gracefully arching stems and fish-like shaped flowers from July to August. This shade-loving cultivar self seeds and is great for naturalizing.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
This stiff, upright plant features metallic blue foliage. Blooms are airy and attractive from summer through winter.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
Erect, blue-green foliage is adorned with yellow flowers that turn gold during autumn.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
This drought-tolerant native grass features dusty blue foliage. Fluffy silver seed heads bloom in late summer or early fall.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
This fine-textured native grass has pink and brown flower panicles in late summer that features a unique fragrance that resembles coriander.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
A rugged, cold hardy native grass that features blue-green foliage and striking, flag-like summer flowers. Great in low maintenance landscapes, rock gardens, and for erosion control.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.
A native, drought-tolerant perennial grass that produces curiously-shaped seed heads. Color highlights on foliage range from green to blue-green to silvery-blue in summer, and red, orange, and purple in fall.
Photos courtesy Missouri Botanical Garden.