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Achillea filipendulina: Gold Yarrow
An aggressive plant that will take with almost no maintaience; reaches heights of 3.5 feet tall. Recommended in places where almost nothing else will take; needs water to get started, or plant in the fall and allow spring rains to germinate the seeds naturally. Gold Yarrow has the largest flower heads of all the yarrows.
  
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Achillea lanulosa: Western Yarrow
What is said for Gold Yarrow above can be said for all the yarrows, except the white and red flowering strains have slightly smaller flowers and rarely reach heights over 3 feet.
 
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Achillea millefolium: White Yarrow
What is said for Gold Yarrow above can be said for all the yarrows, except the white and red flowering strains have slightly smaller flowers and rarely reach heights over 3 feet.
 
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Achillea millefolium rubra: Red Yarrow
What is said for Gold Yarrow above can be said for all the yarrows, except the white and red flowering strains have slightly smaller flowers and rarely reach heights over 3 feet. Red yarrow is the most popular in flower beds.
  
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Agastache foeniculum: Hyssop Lavender
This beautiful, fragrant flower makes a wonderful addition to herb gardens, perennial borders, and wildflower areas. Place a pot of Agastache on porches and patios where its fragrance can be fully appreciated. Flowers are lavender to purple and completely edible.

Agastache needs a fertile, well-drained soil, and although it will tolerate light shade, it will do best with lots of sun. Sow seeds in spring after all danger of frost has passed and the soil has warmed a bit. Cover with 1/8 inch of soil and water sparingly once established. This plant will do very well in a dry climate.
  
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Allium cernuum: Nodding Pink Onion
 
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Alyssum saxatile: Basket of Gold
Excellent in rock gardens, the front of the border, and as a groundcover. Looks incredible cascading down walls.
  
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Ammi majus: Bishop\'s Flower
An erect, branching annual easily established from seed. Native to North Africa and Eurasia, it has naturalized throughout much of the United States. The plant produces an abundance of large, rounded, five to six inch flower heads made up of small snow-white florets. Does not seem to be temperamental about soil conditions, but does require full sun. Looks very similar to Queen Anne's lace and will produce blooms the first year.
 
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Amorpha canescens: Leadplant
This plant may reach forty inches in height but usually is about a foot and a half tall in our area. The plant gets its colloquial name from the gray appearance caused by fine hairs which cover the leaves stems and unopened flowers. Flowering spikes are crowded at the top of the stems. Each spike produces nearly a hundred tiny flowers. Leaves are composed of about twenty pairs of oval leaflets. The thick taproot of this perennial plant penetrates deep underground. At maturity the seedpods (legumes) are about three-sixteenths of an inch long.
 
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Anthemis nobilis: Roman Chamomile
Roman Chamomile is one of those small plants that pack a big aromatic punch. Smelling like a Jolly Rancher sour apple candy, it makes an odiferous bright green ground cover in cool summer climes. Often used in England to fill in cracks between pavers or as a path cover or even as a soft bench cover, it is sometimes referred to as English Chamomile; makes a relaxing tea that is often used for relaxation and sleep aid.
  
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Aquilegia caerulea: Blue Columbine
The Colorado state flower: blue columbine is generally described as a Perennial Forb or herb is native to the U.S. (United States) and has its most active growth period in the spring and summer, it has green foliage and conspicuous blue flowers, with conspicuous Brown fruits or seeds. The greatest bloom is usually observed in the late spring, with fruit and seed production starting in the spring and continuing until summer. Leaves are not retained year to year. The Colorado Blue Columbine has a short life span relative to most other plant species and a Moderate growth rate. At maturity, the typical Colorado Blue Columbine will reach a maximum height at 20 years of 2 feet.
  
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Aquilegia caerulea: Mixed Colors Giant Columbine
These gorgeous Giant Columbine attract butterflies and hummingbirds. The beautiful multicolored flowers grow up from ornamental clumps of blue-green foliage. They are easy to care for and reseed readily.
  
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Aquilegia canadensis: Eastern Columbine
Perennial: One of the earliest native perennials to bloom in the spring with lovely yellow and red flowers that hang just waiting for hummingbirds to pollinate them. Can grow up to 3’ tall in richer soils, but generally grows 1 -2’ tall by 1’ wide.
  
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Aquilegia vulgaris: Dwarf Columbine
  
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Arabis alpina: White Rockcress
  
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Artemisia frigida: Fringed Sagewort
  
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Asclepias curassavica: Blood Flower
 
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Asclepias incarnata: Swamp Milkweed
 
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Asclepias speciosa: Showy Mikweed
 
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Asclepias tuberosa: Butterfly Milkweed
 
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Aster azureus: Sky Blue Aster
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Aster laevis: Smooth Aster
  
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Aster novae-angliae: New England Aster
 
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Aster ptarmicoides: White Upland Aster
 
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Baileya multiradiata: Desert Marigold
  
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Balsamorhiza sagittata: Arrowleaf Balsamroot
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Bellis perennis: English Daisy
  
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Calendula officinalis: Calendula
 
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Callistephus chinensis: China Aster
  
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Campanula carpatica: Tussock Bellflower
 
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Cassia fasciculata: Partridge Pea
 
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Centaurea cyanus: Tall Blue Cornflower
  
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Centaurea cyanus: Tall Mixed Cornflower
 
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Centaurea cyanus: Dwarf Blue Cornflower/Bachelors button
  
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Centaurea cyanus: Polka Dot Cornflower
  
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Cerastium biebersteinii: Snow-in-Summer
  
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Cheiranthus allionii: Siberian Wallflower
 
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Cheiranthus cheiri: English Wallflower
 
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Chrysanthemum carinatum: Painted Daisy
  
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Chrysanthemum coronarium: Garland Daisy
 
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Chrysanthemum leucanthemum: Ox-Eye Daisy
  
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Chrysanthemum maximum, Dwarf: Dwarf Shasta Daisy
 
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Chrysanthemum maximum: Shasta Daisy
  
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Chrysanthemum multicaule: Yellow Daisy
 
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Chrysanthemum paludosum: Creeping Daisy
  
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Cichorium intybus: Chicory
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Clarkia amoena: Dwarf Godetia
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Clarkia pulchella: Deerhorn, Clarkia
 
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Clarkia unguiculata: Clarkia
 
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Collinsia heterophylla: Chinese Houses
 
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Coreopsis basalis: Golden Wave Tickseed
 
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Coreopsis lanceolata: Lance-leaved Coreopsis
  
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Coreopsis lanceolata, Dwarf: Dwarf Lance-leaved Coreopsis
  
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Coreopsis leavenworthii: Leavenworth's Tickseed
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Coreopsis tinctoria: Plains Coreopsis
  
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Coreopsis tinctoria, Dwarf: Dwarf Plains Coreopsis
  
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Coreopsis tinctoria, Dwarf Red: Dwarf Red Plains Coreopsis
  
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Cosmos bipinnatus: Cosmos
 
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Cosmos bipinnatus, Dwarf: Dwarf Cosmos
 
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Cosmos sulphureus: Sulphur Cosmos
 
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Cynoglossum amabile: Chinese Forget-Me-Not
  
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Dalea candida: White Prairie Clover
 
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Dalea purpurea: Purple Prairie Clover
 
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Delphinium ajacis: Rocket Larkspur
  
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Delphinium occidentale: Western Larkspur
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Desmanthus illinoensis: Illinois Bundleflower
  
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Desmodium canadense: Showy Trick Trefoil
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Dianthus barbatus: Sweet William Pinks
 
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Dianthus chinensis: Chinese Pink
 
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Dianthus deltoides: Maiden Pinks
 
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Dianthus plumarius: Cottage Pinks
 
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Dianthus superbus: Fringed Pinks
 
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Digitalis purpurea: Foxglove
  
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Dimorphotheca aurantiaca: African Daisy (Flake)

  
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Echinacea angustifolia: Narrow-leaf Purple Coneflower
  
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Echinacea pallida: Pale Purple Coneflower
  
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Echinacea paradoxa: Yellow Coneflower
  
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Echinacea purpurea: Purple Coneflower
  
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Engelmannia pinnatifida: Engelmann Daisy
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Erigeron speciosus: Fleabane Daisy
 
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Eriophyllum lanatum: Oregon Sunshine
 
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Eryngium yuccifolium: Rattlesnake Master
 
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Eschscholzia caespitosa: Dwarf California Poppy
  
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Eschscholzia californica: California Poppy
  
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Eschscholzia californica: California Poppy, Mixed Colors
 
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Eupatorium maculatum: Joe Pyeweed
 
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Eupatorium perfoliatum: Boneset
 
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Gaillardia aristata: Perennial Gaillardia
  
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Gaillardia aristata: Yellow Gaillardia
  
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Gaillardia pulchella: Annual Gaillardia
  
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Gaura lindheimeri: Gaura
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Gilia capitata: Globe Gilia
 
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Gilia tricolor: Bird's Eyes
 
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Gypsophila elegans: Annual Baby's Breath
 
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Gypsophila paniculata: Perennial Baby's Breath
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Helenium autumnale: Autumn Sneezeweed
 
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Helianthus annuus: Wild Sunflower
  
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Helianthus maximiliani: Maximilian Sunflower
 
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Heliopsis helianthoides: Ox-Eye Sunflower
 
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Hesperis matronalis: Dame's Rocket
  
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Iberis sempervirens: Perennial Candytuft
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Iberis umbellata: Annual Candytuft
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Ipomopsis rubra: Gilia
 
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Iris missouriensis: Wild Blue Iris
  
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Lasthenia glabrata: Goldfields
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Lavatera trimestris: Tree Mallow
 
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