Tripple Brook Farm

bottom

Genus: C

Calamagrostis
reed grass
Calla
water calla; wild calla
Callicladium
(moss)
Caltha
marsh marigold; cowslip
Campanula
bluebells of Scotland; harebell
Campsis
trumpet creeper; trumpet vine
Camptosorus
walking fern
Carex
sedge
Cassia
Senna
Ceanothus
New Jersey tea; red root;wild snowball
Celastrus
American bittersweet
Cephalanthus
buttonbush
Cerastium
Chickweed
Ceratostigma
hardy plumbago
Cercis
eastern redbud tree
Chamaedaphne
cassandra; leatherleaf
Chamaemelum
Chamomile
Chasmanthium
northern sea oats
Cheilanthes
hairy lipfern
Chelone
Lyon's turtlehead; turtle-head
Chionanthus
fringetree
Chrysanthemum
ox-eye daisy; white daisy
Chrysogonum
golden star
Chrysopsis
Golden aster
Cladonia
reindeer moss
Clethra
summersweet; sweet pepperbush
Climacium
tree moss, umbrella moss
Conradina
Cumberland rosemary
Convallaria
lily-of-the-valley; pink-flowered lily-of-the-valley
Coptis
cankerroot; goldthread
Coreopsis
tickseed; stiff coreopsis
Cornus
Asian flowering dogwood; bunchberry; flowering dogwood; kousa dogwood; pagoda dogwood; alternate-leaved dogwood
Cymbopogon
citronella grass; lemon grass
Cyperus
umbrella sedge
Cystopteris
brittle fern; fragile fern

Next: D
Previous: B

Catalog as of April 01, 2008

Ceanothus

(Rhamaneae - buckthorn family)
About 55 species of deciduous or evergreen shrubs or small trees, sometimes spiny, native mostly to western North America.

americanus decid shr • ht 1-3' • zones 3-9

New Jersey tea; red root;wild snowball


native, fragrant, dry - moist, part shade - sun
e US

This rugged, low-growing native shrub bears abundant, feathery clusters of tiny, fragrant, white flowers on long stems in early summer. Spreads slowly to form a colony. Young twigs are noticeably yellow and stand out in winter. The red-colored roots of New Jersey tea, which yield an excellent dye, can penetrate fifteen feet down into the soil. Leaves were used extensively by Revolutionary War soldiers as a tea substitute. Has a history of use as a soap substitute; when rubbed in water, the flowers are said to foam and soften skin. Attracts a wide variety of butterflies and insects, as well as hummingbirds. It is a larval food plant of the rare mottled duskywing butterfly and of the spring azure butterfly. A nitrogen fixer, it can thrive in poor, dry soil. Found in dry, open woods and slopes, it will tolerate light, open shade, but will not withstand heavy shade. Requires good drainage and plenty of light, but with those requirements met it is easily grown, very drought tolerant and long lived, and requires little maintenance.

cat # 5S2E
$12.95 each / 3+, $12.50 ea