US perennials

US perennials Small perennial nursery focused on North American native perennials, their cultivars and much more

Andropogon gerardii 'Blackhawks' -  BIG BLUESTEM 'BLACKHAWKS' - Perennial of the Year 2026! Available in our store www.u...
05/30/2026

Andropogon gerardii 'Blackhawks' - BIG BLUESTEM 'BLACKHAWKS' - Perennial of the Year 2026!
Available in our store www.usperennials.com
(and a lot more!)

Shop our online perennial nursery for North American native plants and nativars. Sustainably grown, pollinator-friendly perennials shipped directly to your door. Discover the beauty of perennial gardening year-round at US Perennials. Explore a stunning array of hardy perennials, from vibrant spring....

Monster-sized flower of Penstemon cobea - SHOWY BEARDTONGUE. Truly showy, but not a plant that can be planted on it's ow...
05/27/2026

Monster-sized flower of Penstemon cobea - SHOWY BEARDTONGUE. Truly showy, but not a plant that can be planted on it's own. It is pretty much one single upright stem with large flowers (imagine it growing in it's natural habitat in grassy prairie and just poking through various grasses). The same way it should be planted in your garden - tucked among other plants, ideally grasses (little blue-stem, prairie dropseed, muhly grass etc).
2'-2'+tall, average to dry soil. Native to Ohio, Illinois and diagonally southwest. It does well in our area, it is not a heavy seeder unfortunately. So we get only a few plants here and there.

Penstemon digitalis 'Husker Red Improved - FOXGLOVE BEARDTONGUE 'HUSKER RED IMPROVED'.One of the first, if not the first...
05/26/2026

Penstemon digitalis 'Husker Red Improved - FOXGLOVE BEARDTONGUE 'HUSKER RED IMPROVED'.
One of the first, if not the first dark-leaved beardtongues on the market. This one is "improved", since these were/are also propagated from seeds and therefore variable in the look and dark-coloration. 'Husker Red Improved' is propagated clonally - from cuttings and divisions only.
At the end, this buddy really seems to be one of the best ones for our south-central midwestern climate (maybe generally for the Midwest).
It's healthy, sturdy, dense, fairly compact and HOLDS THE COLOR the whole season, plus have excellent fall carmine-red color.
For those who love to propagate and share (or sell plants) - it is not patented variety. You can propagate as much as you want!

Thermopsis caroliniana (T. villosa) - CAROLINE LUPINE time in our gardens.Cousin of Baptisia that starts to bloom when b...
05/25/2026

Thermopsis caroliniana (T. villosa) - CAROLINE LUPINE time in our gardens.
Cousin of Baptisia that starts to bloom when baptisia time is over.
Tough, sturdy native perennial, with dramatic seasonal effect = there are not many native perennials that would reach height of 5' during May and would bloom in that height! (tall prairie plants peak in summer and fall fall, the only other tall early ones are narrow-leaved Echinaceas).
Narrow vertical appearance, and transparency are very valuable features.
This is a clumper that doesn't take much space. Silvery foliage and citrine yellow pea-like flowers. Total deer and rabbit resistance, great longevity, excellent drought and heat tolerance.
Full sun is the best, because you can see some leaning in partial sun/half shade garden, like ours. The leaning happens usually after heavy rain here. Plants are strictly upright in full and aired spot. We did cut back some plants to the ground after such a flopping, and the plant usually turned dormant, but came back in full strength next year, without any signs of weakening.
Just like many other native plants, this one has many common regional (and often misleading names) : Aaron's Rod, False Lupine, Southern Lupine, Bush Pea, Blue Ridge Buckbean, ...and many more.
Native to quite a few southeastern and northeastern states, Alabama, Georgia and also Wisconsin. The native range layout suggests that this plant had to be a lot more common once, before the glaciation wiped it out from some areas. Since the seeds are heavy, drop down and don't disperse easily to the longer distance, those wiped areas were never re-populated by it again.
Carolina Lupine is not a pollinator magnet, but bumblebees do visit and love the flowers.
One of the plants that really thrives in our sand bed and has actually even nicer habit - a bit shorter and bulkier. Zone 4-7.
đź’›Thermopsisđź’›, don't you think?
Soon available in our store.

...this is what we like. When a non-native plant (like Digitalis grandiflora - Large-flowered Foxglove) peacefully and h...
05/24/2026

...this is what we like. When a non-native plant (like Digitalis grandiflora - Large-flowered Foxglove) peacefully and happily grows together with native plant (Coreopsis pubescens - Star Tickseed). Generally, it's the fact, when you find the right plant for the right place in your garden = less work and care. Sometimes it's more that the plant finds it's own place. But there's also the fact that the native plants do not judge, they can coexist and enjoy the company of a plant from Europe (Digitalis, Stachys,..), Africa (Eucomis, Kniphofia,.), Asia (Amsonia, Salvia koyame, Polygonatum), or South America (Alstroemeria), without being bullied and maybe even support one another with matching growth strategy, or protective unpalatable chemicals. Many plants from various areas can be "mean", can be thugs, can smother and suppress others, no matter what their origin is. It's often us, humas, who project our ideas into plants. At the end it is the gardener who nurtures, observes, adjusts and balances the powers in the garden. Many non-native plants will also feed hummingbirds, various native bees or butterflies, but also the native insects that feed on leaf will often munch on non-natives, even when they have the choice between native and non-native plant in the same flower bed. Plant and natural world is not black and white. Lets try to judge less, observe and learn more and share our experiences, without repeating many times said "truths" or "half-truths". Lets fill our gardens with wide variety of plants and not with heaps of mulch. Lets try to achieve long and continuous flowering season and higher diversity plantings and therefore higher diversity of other life forms.

Two natives meeting in bloom in our garden:White Partenium auriculatum - WILD GLADE QUININE and purple Blephilia ciliata...
05/22/2026

Two natives meeting in bloom in our garden:
White Partenium auriculatum - WILD GLADE QUININE and purple Blephilia ciliata - DOWNY WOOD MINT.
Here, in the sunny woodland edge, in mildly sloping area, with limestone bedrock deeper underneath. Simply well drained spot, seems to make both very happy.
This Quinine, rare endemic perennial, growing only to southeastern US (dry, rocky glades, woodlands in North Carolina, Virginia, and nearby areas) seems to be very promising plant. It does well for us and we appreciate it's earlier blooming period, very fuzzy leaves and shorter statue (in comparison to more common P. integrifolium). We expect it will grow fine in any average, naturally draining soil (not compacted, wet, waterlogged soil).
Downy Wood Mint is lot more common plant (found in central and estern half of USA), but hardy seen in the gardens. We find that it appreciates light mulching, preferably with composted leaves only (the crown can tend to rot).
Both plants are are aromatic, so deer and rabbit don't bother them

Spigelia marilandica 'Ragin Cajun' - INDIAN PINK 'RAGIN CAJUN' in the woodland edge garden (with some sun, some shade an...
05/21/2026

Spigelia marilandica 'Ragin Cajun' - INDIAN PINK 'RAGIN CAJUN' in the woodland edge garden (with some sun, some shade and "dappled everything" in between).
We had a lot of spigelias ready for spring from 2025, but unfortunately many of them did not resprout, and many of you had them in your orders. We apologize for this, inter loses happen all the time, and Spigelia is obviously one of the plants that has to form a bud in the fall, to be able to sprout in the spring. If they don't have the bud, they will never sprout, despite the roots are strong and alive. This trouble happens only with plans propagated from cuttings - similar behaving are Baptisia, some Vernonia and few other plants.
'Ragin Cajun' is southern provenience plant, but still pretty hardy, tough and long-lived native perennial.
Now the GOOD NEWS : we have quite a lot of the species rooting, so Spigelia marilandica (with darker flowers and more upright, narrower growth). They take their time, but we will have them available during summer-late summer.

Sceneries from our perennial gardens this week (right before stronger storms and rain arrived).We're shifting from late ...
05/20/2026

Sceneries from our perennial gardens this week (right before stronger storms and rain arrived).
We're shifting from late spring to early summer. Each year is a bit different and plants react to the weather patterns and can meet in bloom unexpectedly - we still have bearder irises in bloom and Butterfly Milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) nearly blooming.
Our gardens are "wild", overwhelmed with plants, that have freedom to move around and find their happy spot to thrive. At this point, we just edit and adjust here and there. And yes, there are weeds too :-)
Plants that you can see on the pics - various heritage Iris x germanica cultivars (Bearded Irises), globes of Allium christophii (Star of Persia), yellow spikes of Thermopsis caroliniana (Carolina Lupine), various Tradescantia (Spiderwort), pink flowers of Dianthus carthusianorum (Carthusian Pink), yellow daisies of Englmannia peristennia (Engelann's Daisy) and early Coreopsis auriculata 'Nana' (Mouse-ear Tickseed) ...

Incredible color pattern of Gaillardia SpinTop™ 'Mariachi Red Sky'  - BLANKET FLOWER.Cultivar of North American native p...
05/18/2026

Incredible color pattern of Gaillardia SpinTop™ 'Mariachi Red Sky' - BLANKET FLOWER.
Cultivar of North American native plant, with curled petals and unique blend of orange-red-yellow.
Compact, 12" tall and wide clumps, with very long flowering season (often used as annuals, since they are not long-lived). Pollinator friendly. Zone 3-10.
RedSky

Filipendula vulgaris 'Plena' (syn. 'Multiplex') - DROPWORT. Pic show the progress from fully blooming to budding plant.C...
05/17/2026

Filipendula vulgaris 'Plena' (syn. 'Multiplex') - DROPWORT.
Pic show the progress from fully blooming to budding plant.
Cute smaller perennial for sunny edges. Only 10-15" tall and wide, ornamental fern-like leaves, creamy-white fragrant flowers (with tiny pink ball-shaped buds). The flowers fade to very rust, and somehow spoil the look later on (so it is better to clip them off, but they do look quite good against fine-leaved grasses). Native to drier or drained limestone grasslands in Europe and Asia. Well behaved, interesting plant, that surprisingly can handle our summer humidity. Zone 3-9.
We don't propagate this plant yet, since we were trialing it first.

True gentian blue flowers of Veronica austriaca 'Crater Lake Blue' - AUSTRIAN SPEEDWELL 'CRATER LAKE BLUE'Like with many...
05/14/2026

True gentian blue flowers of Veronica austriaca 'Crater Lake Blue' - AUSTRIAN SPEEDWELL 'CRATER LAKE BLUE'
Like with many other shorter-sprawling/creeping veronica, it's recommended to cut them back 1/3-1/2.
Sun, half shade, average soil, zone 4-8.
Best if combined with smaller and medium sized perennials and grasses.

Address

2688 W Cedar Bluff Road
Bloomington, IN
47401

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