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Mulberry Tree
$25.99
Mulberry Tree
Mulberry Tree: TN Nursery suggests the lovely mulberry tree for customers who need a medium-sized tree that will provide attractive, full foliage without growing overly tall.
Mulberry fruit, or mulberries, range in color from a lively red to a regal purple The glossy berry has an intriguing and complex flavor--they are juicy yet sweet and sour. Some people harvest those plump, glistening berries for preserving, baking, or snacking.
But many others leave them in the tree to attract and nourish local birds. In fact, some avid birdwatchers reach out to TN Nursery looking for trees to attract their feathered friends--the mulberry is an excellent choice! It provides your backyard birds with early summer nourishment and sturdy branches for nesting.
The Mulberry Tree Is Truly Beautiful
The mulberry tree is a deciduous tree native to North America, Europe, and Asia. It grows in a full-sun location and does not like to stand in the shadow of other trees. Instead, it wants to take center stage in your yard--and yes, it is worthy of such attention.
The mulberry is in the medium height range for trees. It will grow at least thirty feet tall but stop growing at around seventy feet. It produces true green, ovate leaves with softly serrated margins.
The mulberry tree grows from a single, central trunk. The branches will grow sturdy and form a relatively symmetrical shape with a bit of occasional trimming during their young growth phases.
Mulberry tree flowers (called catkins) form in attractively sized clusters around the middle of spring. The blossoms are a creamy white or white with a whisper of fresh spring green. The catkins have an attractive tubular shape that makes way for the clusters of colorful berries in the early summer.
People harvest the berries by hand-picking young trees or by reaching for the branches of a taller mulberry tree by using a long, sturdy pole and giving the branches a shake.
The Mulberry Tree Is Even-Tempered
Some fruit trees are simpler to grow than others--such is the case with the mulberry tree. Besides a sunny location in the yard, it does not ask for much from the gardener. It can tolerate short bouts of drought and poor soil quality.
Pruning will help guide it into a beautiful, shapely tree as it grows. But after it fully develops, it asks nothing from you.
Order Your Mulberry Tree From TN Nursery Today
Does your yard need the shade of a medium-sized tree? The mulberry tree from TN Nursery is a fine choice--order today.


Blood Root
$5.69
Blood Root (Sanguinaria canadensis)
Bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis) is a flowering plant native to North America. This perennial herb belongs to the poppy family. The plant gets its name from the reddish-orange sap in its roots, which Native Americans traditionally used as a dye and for medicinal purposes.
Bloodroot has several traditional uses, including as an emetic, as a treatment for coughs and respiratory ailments, and as a topical treatment for skin conditions such as warts and skin tags. However, it should be noted that using bloodroot is not supported by modern medical research, and the plant can be toxic if ingested or misused.
Bloodroot is also a popular ornamental plant, prized for its early spring blooms and attractive foliage. It is often used in woodland gardens or naturalized areas and can be grown in various soil types and light conditions. However, it should be planted with shade because it thrives in partial sun.
Blood Root: Sanguinaria canadensis, or bloodroot, is a North American native perennial species named for its most intriguing characteristic. When someone cuts into this plant, the root system will leak a crimson fluid that resembles blood.
Early North Carolina and Virginia settlers first noted this plant as a species that the Indigenous people of the east coast relied on, using the plant's "blood" as a dye for clothing, body paint, and decorative applications.
Other common names for this plant include the following:
Bloodwort
Bloodroot (a one-word variation)
Red puccoon
Canadia puccoon
Black paste
This plant flourishes in the semi-shade; it can tolerate a full-shade spot in the garden, although it may produce fewer blossoms.
Sanguinaria canadensis Is Easy to Love
Sanguinaria canadensis grows in the most moderate growing zones in the United States, from New England to the mid-south and west across the mid-west prairies.
In nature, bloodroot grows in clearings where sunshine dapples the forest floor. It thrives in rich organic matter.
If you replicate its preferred conditions, it is an easy-to-please plant: semi-shade, enriched woody soil, and moderate moisture. It is disease-resistant, drought-tolerant, and resilient.
The Woodland Charm of Blood Root
Each bloodroot plant bears five to nine lobed leaves with well-defined, rounded teeth. The leaves are relatively small, usually about four to six inches long.
The flowers bloom in the early spring. Each blossom has eight to twelve gossamer, pure white petals. Like the leaves, the flowers are petite, only three inches across at the most. The flower centers are a sunny yellow.
Despite the small size of this lovely plant, the early season color makes it well worth including in a shade garden.
Order Your Blood Root Plant From TN Nursery
TN Nursery suggests the bloodroot plant for anyone who wants early-season blossoms and lovely greenery requiring almost no care. Order yours today.


Sassafras Tree
$23.99
Sassafras Tree
Sassafras Tree: Sassafras albidum, or the sassafras tree, is a beautiful species. TN Nursery suggests this tree for gardeners who want an appealing and graceful shade tree.
It grows best in the moderate USDA growing zones, from southern New England to the Great Lakes, Great Plains, and mid-south.
This species is a native of two continents--North America and Asia. Some call it the Laurel of the Iroquois, honoring the Native Americans who found many uses for the sassafras tree.
This deciduous tree grows up to seventy feet high and attracts many backyard visitors: moths, butterflies, songbirds, squirrels, and chipmunks, to name a few.
Sassafras albidum: One Species, Many Names
Besides the common name sassafras tree, you may hear gardeners call Sassafras albidum by these other nicknames:
Cinnamon Wood
Common Sassafras
Mitten Tree
Sassafras (dropping the "tree" after the name)
White Sassafras
Sassafras Tree Is Easy to Grow and Maintain
In nature, this species grows with no human intervention--along roadsides, at the edges of wooded areas, in open meadows, and randomly throughout the upper great plains region.
They are heat-resistant and drought-resistant. Sassafras trees can even survive in heavy or compacted soils. All the Sassafras tree asks of you is to locate it in a sunny to partial-sun spot in your yard and to water it during its early growth phase.
The Thick Canopy of the Sassafras Tree Provides Relief From the Heat
This erect, tall tree has a dark brown trunk, sometimes with a burgundy hue, and lovely foliage, making it popular for use in any landscape.
Alternating, lobed, medium green leaves measure four to six inches long and approximately two to four inches across. The underside of the leaves is a pale green or creamy white.
In the late spring, females bear four- to five-petal yellow to yellow-green flowers. After blooming, they produce blue to black fruits that emerge in the middle of summer but ripen in the fall. You will love watching local wildlife harvest these fruits.
In autumn, the sassafras tree puts on a vibrant show of red, orange, and yellow.
Order Your Sassafras Tree From TN Nursery Today
The sassafras tree will make a grand statement and provide shade for your yard. Order yours from TN Nursery today.


Redbud Tree
$24.99
Redbud Tree
Redbud Tree: Cercis canadensis, the American Redbud Tree, is a showstopping beauty that announces the arrival of springtime--and warmer days ahead--with a show of profuse, unapologetically bright pink flowers.
The redbud tree is a native species in the United States that grows in most moderate-temperature USDA growing zones. It is a beautiful specimen that gardeners and landscapers love. Landscape professionals often order this tree from TN Nursery to add an organic element along sidewalks, in boulevards, and near intersections. Homeowners prize it as a focal point or an understory tree to pair with taller trees in the landscape.
Other Common Names for Cercis canadensis
You might also hear gardeners refer to the redbud tree by these additional common names:
American redbud tree
Eastern redbud
American Judas tree
Judas tree
Mexican redbud
Texas redbud
Redbud Tree Is Easy to Love
Because of its widespread growing range and popularity, the redbud tree is one of the best-sellers at TN Nursery. Whether you want to plant it to attract early pollinators in the spring or as a specimen in a formal garden, you will love the easygoing nature of this tree.
It is well-suited as an understory tree near taller trees, as it prefers a mixture of sun and shade. Once it establishes a robust root system, it is drought-tolerant, cold-tolerant, and heat-tolerant.
When you plant your young redbud tree, you should expect to give it a little help, mainly sufficient watering in the hottest part of the summer. It needs an inch or two to strengthen before winter. In the fall, give your redbud tree an inch-layer of mulch around the base to tuck it in before cold temperatures arrive--that's particularly essential in the colder regions. By the third year, your redbud tree will be relatively carefree, except for twice-yearly fertilization and occasional trimming.
The Lovely Appearance of the Redbud Tree
Most people choose the redbud for its abundance of flowers that arrive in the spring--dainty pea-shaped fairy flowers that grow in large, showy clusters.
But after the spring, the tree becomes a lovely addition, reaching a mature height of twenty to thirty feet tall and around twenty feet wide. It has an open canopy, delicate and beautiful branches, and heart-shaped green leaves that turn yellow in the fall.
Order Your Redbud Tree From TN Nursery
The American redbud is a good-looking, all-around tree! Order from TN Nursery today.


Trumpet Vine
$6.59
Trumpet Vines (Campsis radicans)
Trumpet Vines: Campsis radicans, which most call the trumpet vine or trumpet creeper, is a fast-growing, multi-stemmed, perennial vine. It is a North American native species originating in the southeastern United States. However, it is an adaptable flower that will grow in most USDA growing zones.
If you need a hardy perennial to cover a large section of fence or to hide an eyesore, trumpet vines can accomplish that task for you within a few seasons. The vines can grow as long as forty feet.
The key to growing healthy trumpet vines is to aerate the soil for faster drainage and fertilize it twice a year. It will also tolerate heat and drought and bounce back after the winter cold.
The Immense Charm of Trumpet Vines
Trumpet vines are famous for their ability to grow fast, but perhaps more so for the rustic charm of the vine and flowers.
The vine is woody and bears dark green, ovate and serrated leaves with a pointed tip. The stems are a slightly lighter hue, creating a lovely tonal effect.
The plant takes its name from the trumpet-shaped flowers, a vibrant coral to orange in color. Each flower is reasonably sized, measuring one to three inches across. However, these blossoms are eye-catching because they tend to bloom in clusters of five to seven flowers. These flowery clusters create large splashes of color against the green vines.
Plant Campsis radicans if You Love Hummingbirds
Due to the long trumpet-shaped blossoms, Campsis radicans attract hummingbirds' attention. Gardeners who create hummingbird gardeners enjoy planting this flowery vine on an arbor or trellis. This inclusion in the garden allows them to contribute to hummingbird health by providing natural nectar instead of constantly refilling feeders.
Why do gardeners care so much about these tiny birds? Here's the answer. Hummingbirds are essential plant pollinators because their long beaks can pollinate slender flowers that other birds cannot.
Order Your Trumpet Vines From TN Nursery
If you want to cover a tall fence or an eyesore with vines or attract busy little hummingbirds, give trumpet vines a try. Order from TN Nursery today.


Giant Ostrich Fern
$6.89
Ostrich Fern Onoclea struthioptersis
Ostrich Fern: Onoclea struthioptersis, which some call an ostrich fern, is a crown-forming plant native to temperate regions of North America. This perennial species grows in damp forests and swampy areas from Canada to the south and western regions.
Ostrich ferns are an attractive plant that can cover bare spots in your garden. They are resistant to common garden problems and are easy to care for. You can enjoy a fresh, vibrant garden with lovely foliage elements with little care.
TN Nursery recommends the ostrich fern for bringing lively greenery and exciting textures to a shade or semi-shade garden.
Ostrich Fern Gets its Name
Ostrich ferns can grow pretty tall. The plants usually reach four to five feet high, but the most towering recorded height of the species is a grand six feet.
The plant grows in erect clusters. Each frond has a sturdy, bright green center stem and pairs of leaves with a gently-rounded saw tooth texture. The crowning glory gives the ostrich fern its name. Each fertile frond forms a rosette crown in a lush green hue. The rosette title curves inward to form a tight coil.
That bend gives the impression of an ostrich trying to bend down its head to hide. Thus, the rosette coil provides the descriptive household name for Onoclea struthioptersis.
Where to Grow Onoclea struthioptersis
The fern grows in light soil and prefers constant moisture. This fern tolerates a cool climate and moderate sunlight but prefers semi-shades to full shade.
The widespread ostrich fern enjoys excellent popularity in semi-shaded gardens and along the foundations of buildings. Fiddlehead ferns are hardy perennials that can withstand temperatures as low as -4 degrees Fahrenheit.
Use it in a border garden (near the back due to its height), in a wooded area where grass cannot thrive, or along the shaded foundation of your home. If you have a barren shady section of your landscape, fiddlehead fern will bring it to life.
Fiddlehead Fern is available online at TN Nursery
TN Nursery provides customers with freshly dug fiddlehead ferns only after receiving each order. You can order confidently, knowing you will receive healthy and fresh ferns.


Elderberry
$25.99
Elderberry Shrub
Elderberry , a deciduous, multi-stemmed, small tree, is a native species to the United States. Elderberry shrub is a hardy tree that flourishes across almost all contiguous 48 states.
TN Nursery recommends this shrub to customers who want a species that is drought-tolerant, cold-tolerant, heat-tolerant, and agreeable. Elderberry produces edible fruits that some people harvest for personal use. However, many other gardeners leave the plump berries for the birds and wildlife to enjoy.
Besides "elderberry," the following are a few other common names that refer to this species:
American elder
American elderberry
Common elderberry
Elder tree
The Elderberry Shrub Is Super Easy to Grow
This species grows in nature with no human intervention. You see them along ditch banks, on the south- or west-facing edges of woods, along light or utility lines, or in open fields. These spots represent their preference for full sunshine or a partially sunny location.
When you plant your elderberry shrub, find a spot with the appropriate sunlight and recreate the woody material the species enjoys in the woods. Add a good handful of hardwood mulch, peat moss, compost, or leaf litter--it craves these woody materials. A young elderberry tree requires about one inch of water each week.
After strengthening and growing a little bit, your elderberry tree will become relatively carefree. It will demand nothing of you except water during an extended drought.
The Rustic Good Looks of the Elderberry Shrub
Elderberry shrubs are shrub-like and rounded in shape. They grow as high as twelve feet tall and might grow as wide.
Opposing, bright green compound leaves grow in clusters of seven to eleven leaflets. They are oval-shaped with a narrow tip, light to bright green, and up to six inches long. They have sharply serrated edges. In autumn, the leaves usually turn bright yellow to deep amber.
They blossom profusely in late spring or early summer--many quarter-inch cream-colored flowers that occur in clusters produce fat, round, purple to black berries.
Order Your Elderberry Shrub From TN Nursery
If you want an easy-care plant that provides abundant berries for yourself or your feathered friends, TN Nursery suggests the elderberry shrub--order yours today.


Cinnamon Fern
$6.89
Cinnamon Fern: Osmunda cinnamomea
Cinnamon Fern: Osmunda cinnomonea, or the cinnamon fern, is a native species to the eastern half of North America. You might find these plants in swamps or bogs if you were hiking through hardwood forests. However, you will most likely find them in shade gardens throughout the United States.
TN Nursery customers love these lush-looking plants. They are effortless to take care of, requiring little water or assistance from the gardener. Furthermore, they resist deer, disease, and other pests, while their shady fronds create a shady oasis for frogs and toads when they need a reprieve from the summer heat.
Cinnamon Fern Earns its Name
Cinnamon fern takes its name from its most distinctive feature--the auburn-colored spikes that develop as the plant matures.
The delicate new fronds will emerge in the early spring and unfurl their tender leaves. The ferns grow taller and broader for several weeks, creating vibrant green leaflets that appear in pairs and have a gently toothy outer edge.
During the summer, the fertile fronds will produce spikes. As they mature, those spikes will grow taller and turn to a rich, deep cinnamon color.
The cinnamon fern grows between three and five feet high and across; they spread quickly.
Where to Plant Osmunda cinnamomea
As a woodland native species, the cinnamon fern prefers a shady or semi-shady spot in your yard. They also prefer more acidic soil, as you might find around pine trees in the forest.
They also love moisture. Cinnamon fern is a typical recommendation when customers call TN Nursery asking what to plant in a slow-draining location that needs a bit of refreshing greenery to brighten it up.
They multiply and can add life to those challenging spots in a relatively short time.
Cinnamon Fern is used by gardeners
Cinnamon fern is a perennial that can help fill in bare spots of the yard with little watering or care. The ferns grow in colonies attached by a dense root system. Because they multiply at a fantastic speed, gardeners find they can separate them from enlivening other areas that need a touch of greenery.
Once they take hold, you will have plenty to add to containers, hanging pots, shade gardens, or for sharing with friends.
Cinnamon Fern is available to purchase at TN Nursery
Are you ready to add Cinnamon Fern to brighten up your shady yard? Order from TN Nursery today.


Bamboo Plant
$14.99
BAMBOO PLANT - Arundinaria Gigantea
Bamboo plants have two types of species that are often in use within residential landscapes. These plants increase by releasing underground runners, also known as rhizomes, which might emerge from the parent plant at a distance from the original location.
They bridge those gaps between plants more quickly, making them perfect for use as screens, hedges, and the trendy open groove effect. Because the rhizomes develop horizontally at a depth of roughly 2 to 18 inches, it is possible to keep their growth under control. It can produce stunning thick hedges by employing a rhizome barrier to limit this subsurface expansion. Many of these plants can withstand the cold.
The experience of strolling across a large, open grove full of these tall plants is unlike anything else. They are also helpful for various applications, including specimen groves, perennial security screens, windbreaks, noise and dust shields, groundcovers, and erosion management. They are also widely known for producing a tropical impression in a usually moderate or even frigid environment. The most effective method of controlling this plant is maintaining a groomed path around the planting.
This route's minimum width should equal the maximum possible height of this species selected for the given area, if not more. Undoubtedly, this may not be practicable at all times, and the confinement methods available will vary according to the location. You may contain these plants using techniques such as rhizome barriers or rhizome trimming, both of which need continuous monitoring to be effective. Natural barriers such as everlasting waterbodies and dense darkness may also aid this purpose.
Bamboo Plant is Easily Grown
They are garden plants of the evergreen variety. They are easy to care for and do not require a lot of water. They are used in gardens in many ways and add an exotic feel to any backyard; They can be used as a hedge or screen to add privacy to your yard or in any other garden arrangements. They can grow in almost any climate and can last for many years. They come in a wide range of sizes, including dwarf and giant-sized.
Bamboo requires very little maintenance
These plants can also be grown in small containers inside and outside. Placing a number of them in your landscaping will help you to showcase your other garden plants. They are also known by many cultures to bring luck to their owners. They have also been grown to become bonsai trees. The stems are easily shaped and can be pruned to interlace. You can also prune bamboo trees back into topiaries. The under leaves are removed, leaving only clumps of leaves at the top. When planting bamboo trees as a screen, they should be planted in the area approximately 2 to 3 feet apart.
That allows them to spread out and create the coverage you need. Pruning it back will stop further growth into areas you do not want. Once they have been planted, they will require very little maintenance.
Bamboo is For Sale at Tennessee Wholesale Nursery with Low Prices and Fast Shipping


Wild Strawberry Plant
$4.69
Wild Strawberry Plants Are Worth Growing
Wild Strawberry: Sometimes, the simplest things in life can offer the most extraordinary pleasure--the wild strawberry plant is one example of this.
The North American native plant often creeps up in the wild in the most unexpected places--along a gravelly roadway, at the edge of a wooded area, or in the middle of the lawn. Seeing those ruby red berries peeking out from their greenery is always a delightful surprise.
Instead of hoping to find a wild strawberry or two in the late spring, you can grow them and be confident you will get to enjoy their sweet, juicy goodness. TN Nursery proudly grows myriad hardy native perennials, including the wild strawberry plant.
Wild Strawberry Plant Makes a Lush Green Ground Cover
Not only do wild strawberries provide you with tasty berries, but the plants also make an attractive ground cover.
Wild strawberry plants have trifoliate, dark green leaves. The flowering stem shows off with five-petal white flowers with a yellow center in the late spring. The flowers emit a lightly floral aroma that attracts bees and pollinators to your yard. Of course, the blossoms later give birth to beautiful red berries.
The plants spread quickly, producing runners from the root system's crown. The runners dig into the earth nearby and create a new plant; some gardeners call this seedling a daughter plant. This cycle continues all season long, forming a dense mat of dark green foliage that stays green through the fall. The plants go dormant during the cold, shorter days of late fall and winter, and wake up in early spring.
It's Easy to Grow Wild Strawberry Plants
Besides being prolific, the wild strawberry plant is easy to grow. It thrives in most growing zones in the continental United States and requires nothing more than full sun or partial sun, springtime fertilizer, and water if you experience drought. In autumn, gardeners in colder zones blanket their wild strawberries with a cozy layer of mulch.
With minimal care, you can have a sizeable wild strawberry patch within a year or two.
Order Wild Strawberry Plants From TN Nursery
Reimagine the wild strawberry plant. Don't think of it as a cute plant you encounter once in a while in nature. Instead, consider it a healthy ground cover plant you can cultivate in a sunny garden. Order your wild strawberry plants from TN Nursery today.


Wild Plum Tree
$23.99
WIld Plum Tree Prunus Americana
Wild Plum Tree: Prunus americana, also known as the American plum tree, is a native tree that flourishes in most USDA growing zones. Its footprint stretches across the United States from the Canadian border to the south.
Historically, Native American indigenous people, including the people of the Cheyenne and Navajo nations, cultivated this tree for nourishment and used the branches in ceremonies.
That dual purpose rings true still today.
While some plum tree species are ornamental with fruit that's best left to the birds, the American plum tree pulls double duty. Indeed, it's both a breathtaking decorative tree and the bearer of delicious, edible plums.
The Immense Beauty of the the Wild Plum Tree
The wild plum tree is a smaller, deciduous tree that grows to a maximum height of just over twenty feet. Its branches sweep out from a single trunk, and it has a gracefully branching crown that spreads about fifteen feet wide.
The angelic white flowers have five pleasingly rounded petals that usually grow in clusters. When in full bloom, the American plum tree appears as though a blanket of snow draped itself over the branches. The blossoms last several days to a week and then give way to the fruit.
The fruit tastes slightly tart and is refreshing on the tongue. Fruits can be mauve, red, or purple. The fruit is compact and juicy. You can use it to make preserves, wine, jams, or pastries.
Caring for Wild Plum Tree
Wild plum trees are not fussy about the soil as long it provides adequate drainage. They love to have plenty of water, but they do not prefer standing water for an extended time.
Amending the soil with natural compost will help you grow a hardy, resilient plum tree.
Occasional pruning of any suckers that develop will train your American plum into a stately, taller shape. However, if you want a bushier appearance, you can skip the trimming. There is no right or wrong answer--it's all about the look you want to achieve.
Order Your Wild Plum Tree From TN Nursery
A wild plum tree is lovely to behold and produces delicious tart fruit for your enjoyment. Order yours from TN Nursery today.


Lily Of The Valley
$6.19
Lily of the Valley (Convallaria majalis)
Lily of the valley is a native perennial flowering native to Europe and Asia. It is scientifically known as Convallaria majalis and belongs to the family Asparagaceae. The plant is known for its sweetly scented, bell-shaped white flowers that appear in the spring.The perennial gas often been used in traditional medicine for its cardiac glycosides, which are compounds that can affect the heart. However, these compounds can also be toxic if ingested in large amounts, so caution should be taken when handling the plant.The Lily of the valley plant is also famous as an ornamental plant and is often used in gardens and as a cut flower in floral arrangements. In some cultures, it is associated with love and is used in wedding bouquets and other romantic occasions.
Lily of the Valley: Convallaria majalis, aka lily of the valley, is a lovely perennial flower. However, it is not truly a lily--it's anatomically more closely related to asparagus!
Whatever you want to call it, this dreamy plant thrives in many USDA growing zones, loves partial shady conditions, and will reward you with a profuse show of heavenly, sweet-scented, creamy-hued flowers in the late spring or early summer.
Lily of the Valley is a native species on several continents--Europe, Asia, and North America. Even though the delicate flowers might suggest otherwise, it is a lovely, even-tempered plant. It is drought-tolerant, deer-resistant, and requires little care.
The Dreamy Good Looks of Lily of the Valley
The petite, creamy, bell-shaped flowers may bloom in the late spring, but the lovely foliage tolerates the mid and late-summer heat and stays a vibrant shade of green all season.
The flowers appear on delicate stems that emerge from lush foliage at the plant's base. The long oval leaves are five to ten inches long and about four inches wide; they form in a semi-upright posture and have smooth edges.
The flowers are tiny but abundant. They are creamy white, bell-shaped, and grow in attractive clusters on multiple stems. Each delicate bloom has six lobed petals that seem to nod with every breeze and slightly flare at the edges. They are graceful and naturally lovely to behold.
Where to Plant Lily of the Valley
Lily of the Valley requires semi-shade to shade garden and well-amended, moist soil. Here are some lovely ways it could work in your landscape:
Mass plantings: Have a shady end of the house where you can't grow grass? Mass plant Lily of the Valley at the foundation and let it spread to cover the entire area--no more struggling to grow that lawn.
Fairy garden: The whimsical appearance of Lily of the Valley lends itself well to an imaginative fairy garden.
Cutting garden: People who love to make fresh floral arrangements often cultivate cutting flowers to tuck into vases. The drooping nature of this flower is lovely, as it appears to spill out of a vase.
Of course, these are just a few ideas--you are limited only by your imagination.
Order Lily of the Valley From TN Nursery Today
Are you ready to try Lily of the Valley? Order from TN nursery today.


Blazing Star
$6.89
Blazing Star (Liatris spicata)
Blazing Star: Liatris spicata, or blazing star, are a native wildflower species originating in the eastern United States. TN Nursery suggests this plant for anyone who wants a flower that is resilient, easy to manage, and still colorful enough to display proudly.
The blazing star plant loves to bask in the sunshine and enjoys the heat and humidity. Conversely, it also tolerates drought--it only needs assistance from you during extended drought. This plant is unfussy about soil types--mix in some compost every so often to feed it.
In nature, blazing star grows in open grassy meadows or fields--its significant height means tall wild grasses do not overshadow it.
Other names for the blazing star include the following:
Marsh blazing star
Dense blazing star
Snakeroot
Gayfeather
Spike gayfeather
The Striking Good Looks of the Blazing Star
The blazing star is notable for its stunning, slender stalks that grow tall as if reaching for the sun. The stalks may stretch as high as six feet in optimal growing conditions.
The grassy-looking, glossy green leaves grow from attractive clumps. The stalks shoot up straight from the center of each plant, forming dramatic spikes.
Flowers form on unbranched spikes and blossom in striking, bold lavender or purple. The blooms open from the very top to the bottom and have a whimsical, fluffy appearance.
The bright color and soft floral notes attract the interest of many bees and butterflies.
How to Use Liatris spicata in Your Landscape
Here are some ways TN Nursery customers work blazing star plants into their landscape:
Pollinator gardens: As mentioned earlier, this plant will buzz with bees and other pollinator species. Pollination is essential for a healthy ecosystem.
Urban gardens: Sunny parks in urban or suburban benefit from this bright burst of color. They can go directly into the ground or in deep containers. The colorful flowers and grassy foliage will please passersby.
Border plants: The substantial height of the blazing star makes it perfect in the back row of a border garden.
Ornamental: Whether you have a rustic cottage garden or a formal garden, the blazing star plant is worthy of serving as a focal point.
Order Your Blazing Star From TN Nursery Today
TN Nursery recommends the blazing star for any customer who needs a tall, impressive full-sun flower. Order yours today.


Red Crepe Myrtle
$23.99
Red Crepe Myrtle
Red Crepe Myrtle: TN Nursery customers go wild over the red crepe myrtle--sell hundreds of our multiple colors of crepe myrtles each year.
Red crepe myrtle will bloom during the mid-summer. The hue is a bright pink-red color. Once the blossoms appear, they continue to bloom for four to six weeks.
The species is super easygoing, requiring little help from you once established. Give your sapling some fertilizer and a nice sunny spot, water it every few days, and watch it grow!
Many people mistake the red crepe myrtle for a tree. However, it is a deciduous shrub, despite its twenty to thirty-foot mature height.
America loves the red crepe myrtle! Although it's not a North American native species, it thrives in the warmer USDA growing zones, especially in the southeastern states.
The red crepe myrtle is cold-hardy and heat-hardy, which may explain its prevalence in the upper south, with freezing temperatures in the winter and blistering summers. It's also resistant to pest damage, disease, and mildew.
The Red Crepe Myrtle Is a Real Showstopper
The eye-popping shade of vibrant red appears across the south during the peak summertime heat. That's when enormous clusters of dainty red florets open up, creating the illusion of a single, vast flower.
When left alone, the red crepe myrtle has multiple upright branches that grow into an elegant, shrub-like shape. However, some gardeners will prune it during its first few seasons to encourage it to grow straight and tall to appear like a tree.
The medium-hue green leaves are smallish, around two inches long, glossy, and oval. They are bountiful and create a lush, green canopy to provide a break from the summer sun.
The bark is light in color with a slightly rough texture. It is not entirely smooth, nor is it rough. The bark renews yearly, sloughing away in the late summer and exposing a fresh layer.
Those stunning red crepe myrtle flowers become a blessing for birds: one-inch or smaller brown pods open to release many seeds.
Red Crepe Myrtle Is Attractive to Insects and Feathered Friends
Pollinators find the vivid red blossoms highly attractive. You will likely witness pollinator insects--bees, moths, dragonflies, and butterflies--enjoying the nectar of your red crepe myrtle.
After the worms and insects retire for the winter, birds will seek out your red crepe myrtle, cracking open those pods to enjoy much-needed sustenance.
Order Your Red Crepe Myrtle From TN Nursery Today
TN Nursery provides the healthiest red crepe myrtle shrubs, dug fresh before shipping. Place your order today.


Red Trillium
$6.99
Red trillium, a wildflower native to North America!
Red trillium, or Trillium erectum, is an exotic wildflower that adds a touch of color to any outdoor space. Its bright red petals and vibrant green leaves stand out in any landscape. Not only is it unique and eye-catching, but it's also effortless to grow!
Make your outdoor space even more beautiful with the addition of red trillium. With its stunning appearance, low-maintenance care requirements, and long-lasting blooms, you'll be able to enjoy the beauty of nature without much effort.
Take your landscaping and garden scheme to the next level with red trillium today! Plant it in your garden quickly and easily to add color and charm.
Red Trillium: A North American perennial wildflower species growing naturally in the Appalachian regions of the United States, the red trillium is a beautiful plant for a shady or semi-shade location.
TN Nursery suggests this plant for a shade garden, rock garden, or on the border of a flower bed--it is a pleasing plant anywhere you use it.
This lovely shade plant is a hardy species and requires little to no care from a gardener. All it needs is placement in the shade or semi-shade and fast-draining soil amended with woody materials. It tolerates short periods of drought and resists pests and diseases.
Red Trillium Has Many Other Names
If you think you might have seen this plant before, but the name doesn't ring true, you might know it by another common name. Some people label the red trillium as follows:
Purple Trillium
Purple Wakerobin
Red Wakerobin
Stinking Benjamin
Stinking Willie
Wake-robin
Wake Robin Trillium
Wet Dog Wakerobin
Whatever you want to call it, this flower is lovely in a shade garden.
The Lovely Appearance of Red Trillium
Red trillium grows from a vigorous root system, forming a sturdy, seven- to twelve-inch high green-brown stem. Its true green, unbranched, ovate leaves measure about six inches long. They grow in whorls from the central stem and sometimes gently curve inward.
They grow in attractive clusters and become dense over time--some people even use this plant as a ground cover.
The plant gets its name from the flower with three petals and forms just above the leaves. The flower petals are red, maroon, or purple and arrive mid spring. They continue blossoming through early summer.
The flowers bear tiny berries that humans cannot digest. Instead, leave them for your garden visitors--birds seem to enjoy them!
Order Your Red Trillium From TN Nursery Today
Red trillium is a low-maintenance plant that requires nothing but a nice shaded spot with excellent organic matter to flourish. Order yours from TN Nursery today.