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Small rounded evergreen shrub is only about a foot tall and two feet wide at the 10-year mark. Perfect for containers and smaller gardens.
A more compact lavender, perfect for container planters, borders, and herb gardens. Plant near your veggie patch to attract the bees!
Just call me Curly! An unusual low-growing evergreen shrub that has just enough character to add a spark to your garden.
Depending upon the source, this golden yellow mop of evergreen foliage could reach anywhere from 2 to 8 feet tall in 10 years' time.
Hop-like flowers last and last from summer into fall on this airy, fragrant ornamental perennial oregano - perfect for hanging baskets!
Deep purple blooms contrast beautifully against the gray-green fragrant foliage. A more compact variety of English lavender.
Tidy mounds of deeply cut, green leaves will add a fresh look to hillsides, rock gardens, or woodland gardens. Blue flowers bring on the bees.
An under-appreciated perennial with lavender blue pincushion-like blooms from late spring up until frost. Bees and butterflies love it!
This bleeding heart will light up shade gardens with its airy, golden foliage, even after the dainty pink hearts disappear.
Rarely would we call a conifer "cute," but this dwarf Norway spruce is indeed that, with plentiful cones decorating short, irregular branches.
Anyone who watched TV in the 60s would understand why this finely-needled, mounding acacia would be named "Cousin Itt."
Mirror bright leaves ranging in color from cream to bright orange will add color and light to sunny gardens.
New chartreuse green leaves emerge in the spring, adding a nice burst of fresh color to a garden just waking up from winter.
Upright blades of grass are lush green at the base with dark red tips. Give it more sun for the most intense red tones that deepen in the fall.
Daphne leads the pack in bringing flowers and its heavenly fragrance to the garden after the long dark days of winter.
An evergreen, variegated sedge that can handle Pacific NW summers in the sun or shady gardens spots.
Dusty blue year-round foliage, fragrant summer blooms, tough enough to thrive on dry hillsides or in other sometimes neglected spots.
Visitors to the nursery won't have any problem finding this oxalis on the shade tables with its almost neon green, yellow, orange, and pink shamrock foliage.
Showy yellow-edged leaves brighten the garden in all seasons, taking on pinkish hues when the temperatures drop.
Lance-shaped, soft green leaves grow in whorls, forming an attractive mat of greenery for shadier spots in the garden.
Got a boggy spot in the garden where nothing seems to grow? Orange you glad we have Orange Sedge in stock?
More sun means more blooms, but this year-round ground cover can handle some shade. Light shearing may promote a second bloom.
This versatile shrub can be trained into tree shape and if left to its own devices, can grow to 10 feet tall and wide, but takes well to pruning for a smaller presence.