Tripple Brook Farm

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Genus: S

Sagina
Corsican moss
Salvia
pineapple sage
Sambucus
sweet elderberry
Sanguinaria
bloodroot
Saponaria
Mediterranean pink
Sasa
bamboo
Sasaella
bamboo
Sassafras
sassafras
Saururus
lizard's tail
Saxifraga
strawberry begonia
Schizachyrium
bunchgrass; little bluestem
Scirpus
bulrush
Sedum
(sedum); golden moss; wall pepper; wild stonecrop; worm grass; yellow stonecrop
Semiarundinaria
bamboo
Sempervivum
cobweb houseleek; common houseleek; hens-and-chickens
Senecio
golden groundsel
Shibataea
bamboo
Silene
fire pink
Silphium
cup plant
Sisyrinchium
pointed blue-eyed grass
Sorghastrum
Indian grass
Spartina
variegated prairie cordgrass
Sphagnum
sphagnum moss
Spigelia
Indian pink
Spiraea
meadowsweet
Sporobolus
prairie dropseed
Stachys
Betony; hedge nettle; woundwort
Stokesia
Stokes' aster
Stylophorum
celandine poppy; wood poppy
Styrax
Japanese snowbell tree
Symphytum
comfrey

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Catalog as of April 01, 2008

Sanguinaria

(Papaveraceae - poppy family)
A single species of perennial woodland herb of eastern and central North America. Cultivated chiefly as an ornamental.

canadensis peren • ht to 10" • zones 4-9

bloodroot


native, ground cover, sun - part shade
eastern and central North America

The distinctive rounded, lobed leaves arise in early spring from a creeping rootstock. The pure white, 1-1/2" diameter flowers, which appear with the leaves, are reminiscent of small magnolia blossoms. The sap of the rootstock, which does indeed look like blood, was used by the Indians as a dye for baskets and clothing, as war paint, and as an insect repellent. Foliage tends to go dormant in late summer (particularly if the soil dries out). An easily cultivated wildflower, bloodroot is happiest in moist, rich soil and partial shade, but is quite adaptable.

cat # 1T9H
$8.95 each / 3+, $8.50 ea