Angelica gigas | Giant Purple Korean Angelica | Dang Gui | 20_Seeds

Angelica gigas | Giant Purple Korean Angelica | Dang Gui | 20_Seeds
87 Available Now
This is Angelica gigas, Purple Angelica, Korean Angelica, Dang Gui, Giant Angelica, Purple Parsnip.This is a biennial plant. It could also be considered a short lived perennial. This biennial herb can get about 6 feet tall and likes to live in the sun or partial shade. It is one of the very best plants to have for the bees, wasps, and other pollinators. This plant blooms from late Summer until early Fall and is very popular with the birds, bees, and butterflies. As an added bunus this plant is wonderfully fragrant when it is in full bloom. It will survive the winter in USDA Hardiness Zones 4 to 9.
--------------------------------------------------Dianthus barbatus | Sweet William | 100_Seeds

Dianthus barbatus | Sweet William | 100_Seeds
87 Available Now
This is Dianthus barbatus, also known as Sweet William. This plant likes to live in the full sun, but could use some afternoon shade if you live down south. So if you do keep an eye on it and see if it starts looking sad in afternoon full sun. The birds, bees, and butterflies will especially love this plant when it is in the full sun. Growing to about a foot and a half high, this plant blooms in the middle of the Summer. This is a nectar source for the Giant Swallowtail, Palamedes Swallowtail, Yehl Skipper, Eufala Skipper, Clouded Skipper, Common Roadside-Skipper, and Eastern Tiger Swallowtail butterflies, and the Banded sphinx , and Heliothis phloxiphaga moths. The flowers of this plant are edible. This biennial or short lived perennial can survive the winter in USDA Hardiness Zones 4 to 8.
--------------------------------------------------Myosotis sylvatica | Woodland Forget Me Not | 500_Seeds

Myosotis sylvatica | Woodland Forget Me Not | 500_Seeds
86 Available Now
This is Myosotis sylvatica, also known as Forget-Me-Not, wood forget-me-not, scorpion grass, and woodland forget-me-not. This is a biennial plant, but it can also be considered a short lived perennial that prefers cooler temperatures and should be planted in light shade. These adorable little flowers grow about a foot high and bloom from the middle of Spring until late Summer. This is the larval host plant for the American Lady butterfly. If left outside the 1 year old plant can survive the Winter and live to see its second year in USDA Hardiness Zones 3 to 9.
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