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Natives

4 ½” deep color-coded pots, 10 count trays. 

More is more when it comes to pollinator habitat, so we buffed our native selection to give you and your insect friends greater options.  If the goal is to have a number of different items blooming at any given time, planting multiple species in a genus is a great way to extend the season.  Thus, our 2026 list contains two more Echinaceas, two wild strawberries, a couple of new blazing stars, another mountain mint, several more baptisias, another monarda, another anise hyssop, a tall coreopsis and more. Whenever possible, we tried to add a compact species to better fit a city-sized yard. 

 

Pollinator habitat advocates recommend the 3x3 guideline to support your local bees and butterflies. That’s three (or more) natives that bloom in each of three seasons. (spring, summer, autumn)  Remind folks that larger groupings of fewer varieties will make it easier for the pollinators to find them than the “one of everything” look, and that a native shrub like Button Bush can provide as much forage as a small garden. We get that establishing a native planting can be an exercise in patience for folks used to the instant gratification of annuals, so our natives are tough, well-rooted, and ready to go, as most of them are already at least one year old.

 

Declaration of Net Contents 1.01 qt (956 ml)