Tiny pink flowers in June form white berries in September. The berries make this shrub highly unusual because very few plants have such bright white fruit. Berries will persist through winter.
The summer foliage is a glossy apple green. The fruit that follows is different than most Viburnums. Bright yellow fruit appear in clusters and then after the first frost they become a translucent golden yellow.
2010 Perennial Plant of the Year. Blue-green foliage and dark blue flowers. Blooms May to July. A sturdy native wildflower. Pods turn charcoal and provides visual interest in winter.
This large perennial has arching branches with suspended pink heart-shaped flowers along the whole length. Blooms May through June, then in the heat of the summer starts going dormant.
Rounded flowers are lavender eyed surrounded by pink to white overlapping petals. Copper-red, disected leaves are beautiful. So much contract in one space.