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2013 <strong>Catalog</strong><br />

In search of earth’s best plants


Gardening friends,<br />

Hello and welcome to the 2013 <strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong><br />

catalog. Our passion is plants and gardening so I can’t<br />

imagine anything as enjoyable and fulfilling as having the<br />

opportunity to operate our nursery. It is very rewarding to<br />

search for and find attractive plants that prove themselves<br />

worthy and durable in our climate, and then to propagate<br />

and make them available to our gardening friends. We<br />

appreciate and value all of you and thank you so much for<br />

your support.<br />

Several of you told us that you were pleased with the days<br />

we were open last year. Because we no longer do mail<br />

order, we do not have to close in the middle of the week<br />

to pack and ship plants. The format will be the same in<br />

2013. We will be open Tuesday through Saturday, 9 am<br />

to 6 pm and only closed on Sunday and Monday.<br />

As we have transitioned from a mail order nursery to a<br />

regional specialty nursery, we’ve made a few additions to<br />

our lineup of plants. We still introduce and offer exciting<br />

new plant discoveries along with our normally stocked<br />

unique, rare and hard-to-find plants, but now also include<br />

a few other choices. I’ve drawn from my nearly 30 years<br />

of experience in the Horticulture field to select and offer<br />

the best performing plants for this area, even if some are<br />

common. Our display gardens contain a mix of these<br />

tried and true common usual plants alongside our tried<br />

and true uncommon unusual plants. So rest assured<br />

we have the top perennials and annuals for a successful<br />

Oklahoma Garden, even if they aren’t all listed in the<br />

catalog. We only offer plants we’ve had success growing,<br />

new or old.<br />

Even though we do not ship plants mail order any more,<br />

we are honored to still provide plants for some of the<br />

premier public gardens on the east coast. For the last<br />

three years we’ve made a delivery of plants to 5 different<br />

gardens in the Washington DC and Philadelphia areas.<br />

Some of these include; Chanticleer, The US Botanic<br />

Garden and the gardens of The Smithsonian Institution.<br />

Just after we sent last year’s catalog to the printer,<br />

we headed out of the country to search for plants in<br />

Argentina. It was an obvious place to look since we have<br />

a number of tough hardy plants from there in our garden<br />

already. We brought back a total of 60 species from this<br />

fabulous trip with several of these already showing great<br />

potential. The plants will be evaluated for a few years<br />

before we make them available. One plant from the trip<br />

is available in 2013, that being a rarely offered species<br />

of Nierembergia or Cupflower. Our selection known as<br />

Taza Grande has flowers that are 3 to 4 times the size<br />

of normal Cupflowers and performed brilliantly in last<br />

summer’s extreme heat.<br />

One of our goals here at <strong>Bustani</strong> is to have several new<br />

plants available each year that have proven themselves<br />

garden worthy in our trials and 2013 is no exception. New<br />

to the catalog this year is Yellow Lobster Claw with its<br />

pendulous exotic blooms that were continually produced<br />

during the hottest parts of the last two brutal summers.<br />

We are also offering an heirloom Shasta Daisy that has<br />

been growing in gardens here in Oklahoma for well over<br />

60 years. A Hibiscus relative with flowers the color of a<br />

sunset, Orange-Scarlet Mallow also makes its way onto<br />

the new list for 2013.<br />

One of the most asked about plants in our display<br />

gardens last fall is the plant known as Hairy Balls with<br />

its most interesting fruit display. Gardeners will also<br />

be able to take home a couple of perennials that are<br />

related to African Violets known as Sinningias. Hardy<br />

White Sinningia and Tante Hardy Sinningia are two new<br />

treasures included in the 2013 catalog.<br />

We welcome you to come visit us this spring and shop our<br />

heat tough plants. As usual, we have lots of interesting<br />

plants on site that aren’t listed in the catalog. Everyone<br />

will be surprised at the number of different shade<br />

perennials we are offering at the nursery this year.<br />

Ruth and I greatly appreciate your interest in our plants<br />

and wish you the best of gardening success in 2013.<br />

Steve


Orange-Scarlet Mallow Hairy Balls Yellow Lobster Claw Heirloom Shasta Daisy<br />

Taza Grande Cup<br />

Flower<br />

Directions to the Nursery<br />

From the intersection of highways 51 and 177, go 3<br />

miles south on 177 to 44th, (Look for the Kubota Tractor<br />

Dealership), turn left or east and go 1/2 mile.<br />

If you are coming from Oklahoma City or South on Interstate<br />

35 you can save a little time by exiting on highway 33 at<br />

Guthrie. Go 22 miles east until you come to highway 177.<br />

Turn left or North on 177 and travel 6 miles toward Stillwater<br />

to 44th, (Look for the Kubota tractor dealership), turn right or<br />

east on 44th and go 1/2 mile.<br />

Tante Hardy Sinningia<br />

Hardy White Sinningia<br />

2013 OPENING WEEKEND<br />

is<br />

Thur, April 11 9 am to 6 pm<br />

Fri, April 12 9 am to 6 pm<br />

Sat, April 13 9 am to 6 pm<br />

Dates and Times<br />

We Are Open<br />

Spring<br />

Tuesday thru Saturday<br />

9 am to 6 pm<br />

April 11 thru June 1<br />

Fall<br />

Tuesday thru Saturday<br />

9 am to 6 pm<br />

September 5 thru<br />

September 28


4<br />

About US<br />

<strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong> is owned<br />

and operated by the husband<br />

and wife team of Steve and Ruth<br />

Owens. A lifelong horticulturist,<br />

Steve was inspired to garden<br />

by his father and grandfather.<br />

In order to do the nursery<br />

fulltime, he stepped down from<br />

his position as host, writer and<br />

producer of the popular TV<br />

program Oklahoma Gardening.<br />

Steve worked for the program<br />

for more than 11 years, the last<br />

7 as show host. The 30 minute<br />

show airs on the Oklahoma<br />

Educational Television Network<br />

and continues to be the most<br />

popular Oklahoma produced<br />

program with an audience of<br />

around 200,000 viewers each<br />

week. While doing the show,<br />

Steve was also a member of<br />

the faculty of the Department<br />

of Horticulture and Landscape<br />

Architecture at Oklahoma State<br />

About Our Nursery<br />

University and held the title of<br />

State Specialist in Consumer<br />

Horticulture with the Oklahoma<br />

Cooperative Extension Service.<br />

In 2007, Steve’s first book was<br />

released. Its title is ‘Best Garden<br />

<strong>Plant</strong>s for Oklahoma’, coauthored<br />

with Laura Peters and<br />

continues to be a top selling item<br />

at book stores across the state.<br />

Steve is a gardener, horticulturist<br />

and plant hunter with a passion<br />

to search the world and find<br />

the best plants to offer through<br />

<strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong>.<br />

Ruth has spent the majority of<br />

her professional career in the<br />

field of accounting, including 8<br />

years with the OSU William S.<br />

Spears School of Business as a<br />

Financial Coordinator. In the fall<br />

of 2007 she left her position with<br />

the university to devote herself<br />

full time to the nursery.<br />

Our Nursery<br />

<strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong> is a<br />

specialty nursery in Stillwater,<br />

Oklahoma. What we offer are<br />

unique, uncommon, hard-tofind,<br />

rare and unusual plants not<br />

available at most garden centers<br />

and nurseries.<br />

We are a true nursery<br />

meaning we grow most all the<br />

plants we offer on site and<br />

only order in a few items. This<br />

Our <strong>Plant</strong>s<br />

<strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong> is a<br />

unique nursery because of<br />

the types of plants we offer<br />

and also because of the mix<br />

of plants we grow and sell.<br />

There are several different<br />

specialty nurseries in the US<br />

that carry a particular category<br />

of ornamental plants. Some<br />

specialize in hardy plants like<br />

perennials or woody plants, or<br />

both, while others grow only<br />

tender plants like annuals and<br />

tropicals. There are also a<br />

number of native plant nurseries<br />

that offer 80-100% US natives<br />

(or at least species native to<br />

their region).<br />

Here at <strong>Bustani</strong> we are<br />

growers of both native and<br />

exotic and both hardy and<br />

tropical plants. We like a<br />

great variety of all types of<br />

plants and enjoy making them<br />

available. With what we have<br />

in the catalog and available on<br />

site, we offer roughly 1/3 native<br />

plants, 1/3 tropical color plants<br />

and 1/3 hardy non-native plants.<br />

The motto for our nursery<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

involves growing our own stock<br />

plants for cuttings and for<br />

collecting seed. Our seedlings<br />

are started and watered with rain<br />

water that we collect from the<br />

roofs of our structures. Growing<br />

our own plants ensures that<br />

we have complete control in<br />

producing a top quality plant for<br />

your garden.<br />

is ‘Grow Something Different’,<br />

but just being different isn’t<br />

nearly enough reason for us to<br />

grow and offer a plant. There<br />

are plenty of different plants<br />

out there but only those that<br />

perform well in our garden trials<br />

make the grade. In particular<br />

plants that perform well in the<br />

heat of summer rate high with<br />

us.<br />

At this time we do not grow<br />

a large number of woody trees<br />

and shrubs but we do plan to<br />

add more of these through the<br />

years. We carry a few more<br />

vines than the average specialty<br />

nursery as this is a plant group<br />

in which we have a great<br />

interest.<br />

Our nursery name <strong>Bustani</strong><br />

(Boo-stah-nee), is a Swahili<br />

word that means garden. It<br />

is meant to reflect our global<br />

interest in the world of Botany<br />

and Horticulture.<br />

Proven performance,<br />

uniqueness, and variety are the<br />

terms we hope come to mind<br />

when someone thinks about the<br />

plants of <strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong>.


The plants in the catalog are listed alphabetically by botanical name.<br />

This is followed by the common name in parenthesis. An alphabetical<br />

list of common names to cross-reference can be found on page 11.<br />

Below the plant name are categories of information starting with<br />

the plant type. Most gardeners know what is meant by perennial,<br />

shrub or tree. We give the plant this label if it is winter hardy in our<br />

zone 6b garden. We use the word annual only for true annuals. That<br />

is a plant that germinates from seed, grows, flowers, sets seed and<br />

naturally dies all in a single year. The term tropical color plant we give<br />

to plants that are not winter hardy in our area yet are not true annuals.<br />

These plants are actually tropical/subtropical perennials or tropical/<br />

subtropical shrubs. Some growers use the word Temperennials to<br />

describe them. Others use the term Blooming Tropicals, but this<br />

doesn’t give justice to all the colorful foliage plants. Our tropical color<br />

plants have more value than annuals in that they start with robust root<br />

systems and it is possible to over-winter many of them inside a warm<br />

brightly lit home.<br />

We use the word native if the plant is found growing naturally<br />

within Oklahoma. Several of these species can also be found in a<br />

number of other states, and in some cases those are listed. The next<br />

category is light level with most plants listed as sun, partial shade,<br />

shade or some combination. This is meant to be read from left to right<br />

as to what the plant prefers. For instance, if a plant is described as<br />

sun, partial shade, this means it grows best in full sun but will tolerate<br />

partially shaded sites. <strong>Plant</strong> size is next with measurements given in<br />

inches and occasionally in feet. From left to right, the first number is<br />

height and the number to the right of the x is width. These are general<br />

guidelines from what we’ve experienced in our garden and may vary<br />

depending on different growing conditions. For the tropical color<br />

plants, this is generally their size here after one season’s growth,<br />

We have also listed the USDA Hardiness Zones we feel best<br />

represent the cold hardiness of each plant. These numbers are the<br />

cold tolerating limits of which the plant is rated. You can sometimes<br />

extend a plant’s cold tolerating range by one or two zones by growing<br />

it in a protected site, such as near the south-facing exposure of a<br />

building. Because we are always fascinated with where plants come<br />

from we’ve included their country of origin. We’ve tried to be as<br />

specific as possible in the space available. An ideal description of<br />

origin would also include the altitude where the plants are found, but<br />

unfortunately this information is lacking in most botanical literature.<br />

If a plant is a cultivar, hybrid or specific selection, the origin listed is<br />

where the species are native.<br />

The last category mentioned is the plant family. These always end<br />

in the letters aceae. Knowing a plant’s family can usually give you<br />

clues to its growing requirements. It’s interesting to see which plants<br />

are related.<br />

At the top and far right of each plant description is the price, item<br />

number and container size indication. The initials lpb indicates the<br />

plant is available in a large pot band, spb stands for small pot band<br />

and gal means a one gallon container. A small pot band is a 3 3/4”<br />

deep by 2 3/8” wide square root-pruning pot. Large pot bands are 4<br />

1/4” deep by 3 9/16” wide square root-pruning pots. The gallon pots<br />

are either standard nursery galons or Root-Maker containers.<br />

Reading the <strong>Catalog</strong><br />

SPB<br />

<strong>Plant</strong> Sizes<br />

LPB<br />

GAL<br />

We offer plants in three different sizes of containers. These are<br />

small pot bands (spb), large pot bands (lpb), and gallons (gal). The<br />

small pot band is a 3 ¾” deep by 2 3/8” wide square pot. Large pot<br />

bands are 4 ¼” deep by 3 9/16” wide square pots, and the gal pots<br />

are either standard nursery gallons or Root-Maker containers. Most<br />

of the plants we offer come in large pot bands and customers are<br />

thrilled at how large the plants are when they see them. Pot bands<br />

are called as such because of the narrow band of plastic that forms a<br />

plus for the bottom of the pot. The design leaves a sizeable opening<br />

for roots to grow into and be air pruned at their tips which creates<br />

root-branching thus forming a stronger root system. Their square<br />

shape also prevents root circling within the container, which can<br />

weaken the plant.<br />

The gallon pots we use for the more woody root systems are the<br />

patented Root-Maker pots with unique root pruning design. The<br />

sides of the pot are stair-stepped with root-pruning drain holes at<br />

different heights. Raised ribs, or lines on the pot’s side direct roots<br />

downward to the openings while preventing them from circling.<br />

We have invested in this type of growing system in order<br />

to provide the healthiest, strongest and most robust plants for our<br />

gardening customers.<br />

www.bustaniplantfarm.com 5


6<br />

Arizona Butterfly Weed<br />

Arizona Red Shades Gaillardia<br />

Arizona Sun Gaillardia<br />

Azure Sage<br />

Baby Swan White Coneflower<br />

Bailey’s Hedgehog Cactus<br />

Barbara’s Buttons<br />

Blue False Indigo<br />

Brazilian Button<br />

Brazilian Verbena<br />

Burgundy Gaillardia<br />

Busse’s Pentas<br />

Carnival Perennial Lantana<br />

Chipola River Daisy<br />

Cluster-Head Dianthus<br />

Coral <strong>Plant</strong> (Dwarf Form)<br />

Dallas Red Lantana<br />

Deep Blue False Vervain<br />

Dotted Blazing Star<br />

Drummond’s Aster<br />

Dwarf Red False Vervain<br />

Eastern Bluestar<br />

Elegant Blazing Star<br />

Fireworks Globe Amaranth<br />

Galena Red Sage<br />

Giant Coneflower<br />

Greg Grant Variegated Lantana<br />

Greystone Gold Cestrum<br />

Hairy Balls<br />

Hardy Blue Passion Flower<br />

Hardy Heliotrope<br />

Heirloom Dianthus<br />

Heirloom Shasta Daisy<br />

Hummingbird Shrub<br />

Hybrid Passion Flower<br />

Inspiration Passion Vine<br />

Japanese Dianthus<br />

Hummingbird and Butterfly <strong>Plant</strong>s<br />

Butterfly Nectar <strong>Plant</strong>s Hummingbird <strong>Plant</strong>s<br />

Large Coneflower<br />

Lavender Cat’s Whiskers<br />

Lavender Pentas<br />

Lavender Trailing Lantana<br />

Mesa Yellow Gaillardia<br />

Musical Notes Clerodendrum<br />

‘Nairobi Blush’ Trailing Lantana<br />

Narrow-Leaf Purple Coneflower<br />

Narrow-leaf Sunflower<br />

Oblongleaf Twinflower<br />

Orange-Scarlet Mallow<br />

Pale Purple Coneflower<br />

Pink False Vervain<br />

Pink Preference Autumn Sage<br />

Pink Swamp Milkweed<br />

Prairie Gaillardia<br />

Punch Bowl Gaillardia<br />

Purple False Vervain<br />

Raspberry Fire Dianthus<br />

Rayless Gaillardia<br />

Rigid Goldenrod<br />

Rough Blazing Star<br />

Rue<br />

Samantha Lantana<br />

Shell Bush<br />

Silky Gold Butterfly Weed<br />

Silver Groundsel<br />

Silver Spires Vitex<br />

Slender Mountain Mint<br />

Stars and Stripes Pentas<br />

Taza Grande Cup Flower<br />

Texas Greeneyes<br />

Texas Perennial Lantana<br />

Thread-Leaf Blue Star<br />

Tokajer Gaillardia<br />

Tropical Butterfly Weed<br />

Wanda Hybrid Phlox<br />

White Cat’s Whiskers<br />

Zinn Orange Perennial Lantana<br />

Bird of Paradise Shrub<br />

Bolero Hummingbird Mint<br />

Busse’s Pentas<br />

Cherry Queen Sage<br />

Climbing Snapdragon<br />

Colorado Columbine<br />

Coral Bean Hybrid<br />

Coral <strong>Plant</strong> (Dwarf Form)<br />

David Verity Cigar <strong>Plant</strong><br />

Deep Blue False Vervain<br />

Dwarf Red False Vervain<br />

Galena Red Sage<br />

Greystone Gold Cestrum<br />

Hardy White Sinningia<br />

Himalayan Gloxinia<br />

Hummingbird Shrub<br />

King’s Crown<br />

Lavender Pentas<br />

Lion’s Ears<br />

Mexican Plume<br />

Orange Peel Cestrum<br />

Pink False Vervain<br />

Pink Preference Autumn<br />

Sage<br />

Pink Turk’s Cap<br />

Purple Cestrum<br />

Blue False Indigo<br />

Bronze Fennell<br />

Hairy Balls<br />

Golden False Indigo<br />

Hardy Blue Passion Flower<br />

Hybrid Passion Flower<br />

Indian Grass<br />

Oblongleaf Twinflower<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

Purple False Vervain<br />

Red Firecracker Vine<br />

Red Shrimp <strong>Plant</strong><br />

Smooth Penstemon<br />

South African Foxglove<br />

St. Elmoe’s Fire Coral <strong>Plant</strong><br />

Stars and Stripes Pentas<br />

Tante Hardy Sinningia<br />

Turk’s Cap<br />

White Shrimp <strong>Plant</strong><br />

White-Flowered Golden<br />

Plume<br />

Woodland Agave<br />

Yellow Cestrum<br />

Butterfly Larval Host <strong>Plant</strong>s<br />

Pale Purple Coneflower<br />

Poppy Mallow<br />

Rue<br />

Tropical Butterfly Weed<br />

Turk’s Cap<br />

White False Indigo


Oklahoma Native <strong>Plant</strong>s<br />

Blackfoot Daisy<br />

Prairie Bluet<br />

On the cover of the catalog we have<br />

the caption “In search of earth’s best<br />

plants”. We are always looking for the<br />

best performing plants for Oklahoma<br />

and the surrounding region and often<br />

travel to countries with similar climates.<br />

However, it is also our mission to propagate<br />

and make available the plants that<br />

are native to this area. We have a passion<br />

for Oklahoma’s native plants that is<br />

equal to the botanical delights we find in<br />

other parts of the world.<br />

Each year we explore our home state,<br />

searching for those indigenous plants<br />

we can test for garden performance and<br />

best methods of propagation. Another<br />

goal of ours is to, each year, offer a few<br />

new native species that we and other<br />

nurseries have not produced before.<br />

Last year we had a crop of Stenaria nigricans,<br />

(Prairie Bluet) and some Melampodium<br />

leucanthum, (Blackfoot Daisy),<br />

to go with our usual extensive list of<br />

native plants. A few first-time offerings<br />

of Oklahoma natives we have for 2013<br />

include; Echinocereus reichenbachii<br />

ssp Baileyi, (Bailey’s Hedgehog Cactus),<br />

and Amsonia tabernaemontana,<br />

(Eastern Bluestar). Just like the Prairie<br />

Bluet and Blackfoot Daisy, there are<br />

sure to be a number of native species<br />

available on site that aren’t listed in the<br />

catalog for the 2013 season as well. All<br />

of our native plants are nursery propagated<br />

and grown and not collected from<br />

the wild.<br />

Steve’s Speaking Schedule for 2013<br />

Eastern Bluestar<br />

Bailey’s Hedgehog Cactus<br />

Feb 7 Southern Tulsa Home & Garden Club Tulsa, OK<br />

Feb 16 Flower Garden & Nature Society Springdale, AR<br />

Mar 13 Kay County Master Gardeners Ponca City, OK<br />

Mar 16 Myriad Botanical Garden’s Oklahoma Gardening School Oklahoma City, OK<br />

Mar 29 The Botanic Garden at OSU Stillwater, OK<br />

Aug 9 Cleveland County Master Gardeners Norman, OK<br />

www.bustaniplantfarm.com 7


8<br />

<strong>Plant</strong> Exploring in<br />

Argentina<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379


www.bustaniplantfarm.com 9


10<br />

Acalypha<br />

I’ve often said that color from foliage is usually<br />

more reliable than color from flowers during the<br />

extremely hot weather of summer. A group of<br />

plants that are dependably colorful when it’s really<br />

hot outside are the Acalyphas. They belong to the<br />

Family Euphorbiaceae, but do not contain milky<br />

sap. There are around 430 species worldwide<br />

with most occurring in the tropics and subtropics.<br />

Usually known as Copperleafs, Acalyphas are<br />

popular in tropical gardens and landscapes where<br />

they are sometimes grown as small trees or shaped<br />

into hedges, and highly valued for their brilliantly<br />

colored leaves. These plants do produce small<br />

petalless flowers bourne in terminal or axillary,<br />

catkin-like racemes that are usually unnoticed but<br />

occasionally can be large and showy like in the<br />

case of the Chenille <strong>Plant</strong> (aka Red Hot Cat’s Tail).<br />

Although they grow into shrubs and small trees in<br />

C D<br />

A<br />

B<br />

A. Acalypha ‘Inferno’ (Inferno Copperleaf)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 30” x 24” /<br />

Origin: South Pacific Family: Euphorbiacecae<br />

It’s easy to see how this hot new copperleaf got its name. Inferno’s small leaves<br />

are all ablaze in shades of red, copper, orange, yellow, pink with an occasional<br />

bit of green. A real firestorm of color, this selection was discovered in Australia<br />

where it is occasionally referred to by the name Brownie Form. It only<br />

grows to about 30 inches tall in a season in our garden but can attain an eventual<br />

height of 10-12 feet in areas where it is winter hardy. Inferno Copperleaf<br />

is fairly quick growing, has dense foliage and achieves its best color in full sun.<br />

B. Acalypha wilkesiana ‘Kona Gold’<br />

(Kona Gold Copperleaf)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 30” x 36” /<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Euphorbiaceae<br />

the tropics, gardeners in this area can utilize them<br />

to great effect in sunny color beds and containers,<br />

much the same way we use Coleus. Acalyphas<br />

with new leaf color, shapes and forms are continually<br />

being discovered or bred, so we will continue<br />

to obtain them and trial them for our area.<br />

This low mounding perennial exhibits an alluring combination of bluish foliage and<br />

round clusters of soft pink springtime blooms. Stone cress tolerates warm and humid<br />

summers but in all honesty would prefer to be a little cooler. We’ve maintained<br />

plants for several years in all-day full sun by growing them in a well-drained raised<br />

bed. A little afternoon shade would serve them even better. With its short stature,<br />

this native of Turkey and Iran begs to be grown in a well-drained rock garden. Give<br />

E it an infertile slightly alkaline soil and keep it a little on the dry side. To tidy-up,<br />

remove the seedheads after flowering, but leave a few to encourage a few seedlings.<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

$5.97<br />

#485<br />

LPB<br />

$5.97<br />

#547<br />

LPB<br />

Due to modern plant breeding and selection, the common names of some plants do<br />

not seem to make sense any more. Just like we now have white, yellow and orange<br />

flowering Purple Coneflowers, hybridization has also produced plants traditionally<br />

known as Copperleafs with beautiful gold and green foliage. Such is the case with<br />

Kona Gold Copperleaf. Very durable in extreme heat, its large leaves splashed<br />

bright green and gold really show up in the garden. This showy tropical foliage<br />

plant was much asked about in our garden during the crazy hot summer of 2011.<br />

C. Acalypha wilkesiana ‘Mardi Gras’ aka. ‘Cypress Elf’<br />

(‘Mardi Gras’ Copperleaf)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Figi, Pacific Islands Family: Euphorbiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#269<br />

LPB<br />

Vastly different than other Copperleaf selections, Mardi Gras adds sizzle to the<br />

garden with its gorgeous highly-cut strap-like leaves. I call it Mardi Gras because<br />

that is how I was first introduced to it in the late 1990’s. This fabulous foliage plant<br />

also goes by its most-likely original name Cypress Elf, as it was first discovered in<br />

Cypress Gardens, Florida. Easy to grow, heat and humidity tolerant, this winner<br />

grows trouble free while lending its distinctly different color and texture to gardens<br />

and containers. We offer large plants to make a quick show in temperate gardens.<br />

D. Acalypha wilkesiana ‘Marginata Bronze’<br />

(Marginata Bronze Copperleaf)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Euphorbiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#550<br />

LPB<br />

With an attractive copper-burgundy leaf color thought the heat of summer, Marginata<br />

Bronze Copperleaf is well worth growing. What really knocks folks<br />

socks off is the change in color you get when fall arrives. The bronze tones give<br />

way to a brilliant rust red in the outer leaf margins. We picked up this not-often-seen<br />

selection during a recent trip to San Diego, CA. The particular variety,<br />

marginata, was introduced to Horticulture back in 1875 of which this is undoubtedly<br />

a form. Several Oklahoma County Master Gardeners went bonkers<br />

over this plant when we included it in one of our recent garden show displays.<br />

E. Aethionema grandiflorum (Stone Cress)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 12” x 18” / Zone 5-9<br />

Origin: Turkey, Iran Family: Brassicaceae<br />

$4.11<br />

#221<br />

SPB


G. Agastache cana-hyb. ‘Bolero’<br />

(Bolero Hummingbird Mint) NEW<br />

Pennial / Sun / 18’ x 18” / Zone 5-10<br />

Origin: New Mexico, W Texas Family: Lamiaceae<br />

I’ve grown a number of Hummingbird Mints over the years and they always<br />

perform well as long as they are planted in full sun and in a well drained soil<br />

that isn’t over-watered. Bolero is a unique selection first offered in 2011 that<br />

only reaches a height of about 18 inches. Its flowers are made up of rose-purple<br />

corollas with purple calyces but what sets this Agastache apart is its bronze<br />

tinted foliage. A hybrid of A. cana x A. bareri, it is heat tolerant and moderately<br />

tolerant of drought. Though they are sometimes referred to as Mosquito<br />

Hyssops, Agastaches are excellent plants for attracting hummingbirds.<br />

H. Alternanthera sp. (White Variegated Alternanthera)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 12” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Tropical America Family: Amaranthaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#642<br />

LPB<br />

We were given this old fashioned pass-along plant by Jimmy Turner of the Dallas<br />

Arboretum. White Variegated Alternanthera is a once-popular now hardto-find<br />

Victorian bedding plant that I think has a place in today’s gardens. Its<br />

highly variegated foliage looks superb spilling over the edge of a mixed container<br />

or raised bed. With its trailing habit, excellent heat tolerance, and loads of<br />

white color, this Alternanthera can definitely fill a niche in the summer garden.<br />

I. Amsonia hubrichtii (Thread-Leaf Blue Star) NEW<br />

Native Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 36” x 36” / Zone 4-9<br />

Origin: Oklahoma and Arkansas Family: Apocynaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#377<br />

LPB<br />

Threadleaf Blue Star has a relatively small range where it is found in the wild,<br />

hailing only form eastern Oklahoma and western Arkansas. Still fairly new to the<br />

gardening world, it is rapidly becoming known, grown and loved by horticulturists<br />

everywhere. The Perennial <strong>Plant</strong> Association has awarded it the Perennial<br />

<strong>Plant</strong> of the year for 2011 and deservedly so. In spring this native perennial is<br />

topped with large round cluster of attractive light blue or silvery blue flowers. Most<br />

people grow it, however for its foliage. The fine textured leaves turn a beautiful<br />

gold during the fall making it one of the best perennials for fall foliage display.<br />

J. Amsonia tabernaemontana (Eastern Bluestar) NEW<br />

Native Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 36” x 36” / Zone 5-10<br />

Origin: E & SE US Family: Apocynaceae<br />

$8.96<br />

#510<br />

GAL<br />

More and more gardeners are adding the tough group of native perennials<br />

known as Amsonias to their landscapes. Also called Bluestars, they provide<br />

clusters of blue flowers in spring in addition to beautiful gold foliage during<br />

the fall. Eastern Bluestar is a species with wider leaves than most and is<br />

one of the earliest to bloom in the spring. It will grow and flower well in the<br />

shade of deciduous trees and it tolerates drought along with clay soil and isn’t<br />

fed upon by deer. Tough, tap-rooted and long lived, its species name honors<br />

16th century German Herbalist Jakobus Theodorus Tabernaemontanus.<br />

K. Anisacanthus quadrifidus var. wrightii<br />

(Hummingbird Shrub)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 36” x 36” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Texas and Mexico Family: Acanthaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#644<br />

LPB<br />

A stellar garden performer each year here at <strong>Bustani</strong>, Hummingbird Shrub behaves<br />

more as a perennial than a shrub. It is an excellent choice for perennial or mixed borders<br />

and beds. I’ve even heard that it grows well in patio containers. As soon as the weather<br />

gets hot it starts producing its brilliant orange hummingbird-attracting flowers and<br />

continues until frost. Tolerant of many soil types including clay, this winning plant is<br />

also extremely drought tolerant. This continues to be one of our most popular items.<br />

L. Aquilegia caerulea (Colorado Columbine)<br />

Perennial / Shade to Partial Shade / 18”x 24” / Zone 4-8<br />

Origin: Rocky Mountains Family: Ranunculaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#161<br />

LPB<br />

$5.97<br />

#382<br />

LPB<br />

With its blue and white blooms reaching up to 3” across, Colorado Columbine has<br />

the largest flowers of all the Columbines. The state flower of Colorado, it is found<br />

in moist open spots from the foothills to alpine regions of the Rocky Mountains<br />

from Idaho and Montana to New Mexico. To perform best in our area it needs<br />

a well drained soil and shade from the afternoon sun. The word Columbine is<br />

derived from the Latin word ‘Columba’, meaning a dove, and refers to the shape<br />

of the flowers, said to resemble five doves drinking from a dish. A good hummingbird<br />

plant, this perennial is sometimes called Rocky Mountain Columbine.<br />

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A. Argyreia nervosa (Wooly Morning Glory)<br />

Tropical Vine / Sun / 10-12’ /<br />

Origin: India, Bangladesh Family: Convolvulaceae<br />

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Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

$9.98<br />

#247<br />

LPB<br />

Looking more like the vine in Jack-and-the-Beanstalk, than its relatives, the Ipomoeas<br />

(Morning Glories), this plant definitely gets noticed in the garden. Wooly Morning<br />

glory flowers in late summer and fall with large clusters of pale pink blooms but<br />

the reason I grow it is for its leaves and stems. Native to India and Bangladesh, this<br />

twining climber sports heart-shaped leaves nearly a foot broad and downy-white on<br />

the undersides. The new shoots and thick stems exhibit this pearly sheen as well.<br />

B. Artemisia mauiensis (Maui Wormwood)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Endemic to Maui Family: Asteraceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#487<br />

LPB<br />

Maui Wormwood is one of those plants that once you see it, you’ve got to have<br />

it. This was certainly the case when I encountered this gorgeous Artemisia a few<br />

years ago. It has looked absolutely stunning as a single specimen in a container,<br />

thriving in all day blazing hot sunlight. Its silvery foliage has an amazingly fine<br />

texture, very soft and feather-like, and combines well with just about anything. It’s<br />

a bit surprising that Maui Wormwood performs so incredibly well in the hot and<br />

humid south given its extremely limited natural range. In the wild it is only found<br />

growing at elevations of 6,000-7,500 ft in Haleakala National Park on the island<br />

of Maui in Hawaii. Its Hawaiian name is Ahinahina and refers to its gray color.<br />

C. Asclepias angustifolia (Arizona Butterfly Weed)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Arizona, Mexico Family: Asclepiadaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#531<br />

LPB<br />

For those of you who can’t get enough cool butterfly plants for your garden, you should<br />

really check out this interesting member of the Milkweed Family. The summer heat<br />

can never get too hot for this plant, as it is well accustomed to the weather of its native<br />

range in Southern Arizona and adjacent Mexico. Arizona Butterfly Weed, like all<br />

members of the genus Asclepias is a delight for the larvae of Monarch butterflies. Its<br />

flower clusters are purplish-white opening from buds that are pink. The very narrow<br />

leaves also give the plant a fine texture when used in flower beds or patio containers.<br />

D. Asclepias curassavica (Tropical Butterfly Weed)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 30” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Texas to South America Family: Apocynaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#286<br />

LPB<br />

No butterfly garden should be without this beautiful plant. A stately<br />

specimen it is be-decked with numerous clusters of festive red and<br />

orange flowers throughout the growing season. Like airplanes approaching<br />

the runway, butterflies will line up to sample the nectar of its blooms.<br />

E. Asclepias curassavica ‘Silky Gold’<br />

(Silky Gold Butterfly Weed)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 30” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Texas to South America Family: Apocynaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#282<br />

LPB<br />

A strong grower and excellent performer like the traditional Tropical Butterfly Weed,<br />

Silky Gold adds a new color dimension to an already superb plant. The flowers are a delicious<br />

yellow-orange hue that really lights up the garden. I would frequently include<br />

this plant in the garden designs I did for the studio grounds at Oklahoma Gardening.<br />

F. Asclepias incarnata (Pink Swamp Milkweed)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 40” x 30” / Zone 3-10<br />

Origin: N America except West coast Family: Asclepiadaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#474<br />

LPB<br />

This tall native perennial tolerates heat extremely well while producing its multitudes<br />

of soft pink bloom clusters for several months late spring through fall. It<br />

grows naturally at the edge of seasonally wet areas so it needs regular watering to<br />

keep it flowering. Pink Swamp Milkweed is a clumping perennial and will not<br />

spread throughout the garden. This plant is outstanding in butterfly gardens both as<br />

a nectar source for adults and a host plant for Monarch caterpillars. Some gardeners<br />

describe the scent of its showy blooms like that of vanilla, but a couple of our<br />

employees insist its fragrance smells like something known as bubblegum tape.


G. Asystasia gagetica ‘You’re So Vein’<br />

(Striped Ganges Primrose) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 12” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Asia, Africa Family: Acanthaceae<br />

You’ve probably noticed that we like variegated plants here at <strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong>.<br />

It’s fun for us to collect and grow different forms of variegation even on the same<br />

species of plant. Such is the case with this Ganges Primrose. It is called ‘You’re so<br />

Vein’ because of the net-like reticulated pattern of variegation in its leaves. It’s quite<br />

a bit different than our other variegated Ganges Primrose. I always tell people not<br />

to buy these plants for their attractive Lavender flowers because they are only on the<br />

plant during the short day photo period of fall, winter and spring. Instead, grow it for<br />

its beautiful spilling foliage that would make any Carly Simon fan start humming.<br />

H. Asystasia gangetica ‘Variegata’<br />

(Variegated Ganges Primrose) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 10” x 30” /<br />

Origin: Asia, Africa Family: Acanthaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#654<br />

LPB<br />

Named for the Ganges River in its homeland in India, this attractive foliage<br />

plant makes an excellent plant for spilling over the edge of mixed containers.<br />

It flowers only a little in spring and fall in our area, so don’t grow it<br />

for that reason. The marbled green and white leaves make this plant special.<br />

I. Baptisia alba var. macrophylla (White False Indigo)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 42” x 24” / Zone 3-10<br />

Origin: Eastern US Family: Fabaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#507<br />

LPB<br />

This is a tall, stately and elegant native perennial found growing in both dry and<br />

wet prairies. Its towers of white blooms are held on long spikes above waxy<br />

green foliage. Sometimes reaching as high as 5 feet, White False Indigo is a<br />

great companion to the other Baptisias extending the bloom season as it flowers<br />

later, from late spring into summer. It can be toxic to cattle if consumed in<br />

great amounts but makes for an excellent specimen in native and xeric gardens.<br />

J. Baptisia australis var. minor (Blue False Indigo)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 24” x 24” / Zone 4-9<br />

Origin: Coastal and Midwest US Family: Fabaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#439<br />

LPB<br />

I can’t believe some nurserymen call these elegant plants “Red-neck Lupines”.<br />

Baptisias are an attractive and distinct species of native perennials quickly<br />

becoming more popular as garden ornamentals. Blue False Indigo is a favorite<br />

plant of native plant lovers and exotic plant-lovers alike. Spires of gorgeous<br />

blue flowers in spring make it highly sought after. Give this beauty<br />

time to get established in your garden as it can take a few years to bloom well.<br />

K. Baptisia sphaerocarpa (Golden False Indigo)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 36” / Zone 5-9<br />

Origin: South and Southeast US Family: Fabaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#350<br />

LPB<br />

Everyone who visits our nursery in spring is quick to notice the golden blooms<br />

of this perennial in our native display beds. A single mature specimen of Golden<br />

False Indigo creates a striking show in the spring landscape. This plant is tough,<br />

drought tolerant and has a nice mounding form. If not watered in summer the<br />

plant may go dormant and the stems break with the wind. Be patient when you<br />

plant Baptisias as they take a few years to establish themselves but are rewarding<br />

as they are very long-lived. Don’t divide as they resent root disturbance.<br />

L. Berlandiera texana (Texas Greeneyes)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 36” x 36” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: Southcentral US Family: Asteraceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#359<br />

LPB<br />

$5.97<br />

#564<br />

LPB<br />

This rugged native perennial is a thing of beauty when in full bloom growing out in the<br />

western part of the state. The plants really show up when flowering during the intense<br />

heat and drought of summer when everything around them is turning brown and crispy.<br />

Makes a wonderful addition to native beds, xeric plantings and butterfly gardens.<br />

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A. Blepharis maderaspatensis (Blepharis)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: East Africa Family: Acanthaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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$6.98<br />

#533<br />

LPB<br />

We offer quite a few plants in the Acanthus Family because they perform so<br />

well in the heat, giving us loads of colorful flowers. Blepharis is a genus within<br />

this family not often encountered, especially here in the US. We’ve grown<br />

this particular species for ten years after collecting it in Kenya back in 2002<br />

and have enjoyed its unique basket-like clusters of true blue flowers. Because<br />

of its toughness, ease of growth and great performance in containers, we<br />

decided to offer it for the first time in 2012. I guarantee you that probably no<br />

horticulturist or gardener will be able to identify this plant in your garden.<br />

B. Bulbine frutescens ‘Hallmark’ (Orange Bulbine Lily)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: South Africa Family: Liliaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#177<br />

LPB<br />

The ability of Orange Bulbine Lily to continually produce its bright orange spikes of<br />

flowers, no matter how hot the weather, has made it extremely popular in the south.<br />

This South African succulent with cylindrical foliage occasionally over-winters in<br />

our zone 6b Stillwater garden. A single specimen in a container is absolutely gorgeous<br />

with its star-shaped flowers towering on wands above the foliage. Keep this constant<br />

bloomer on the dry side and remove faded flower stems to keep it tidy. The cultivar<br />

“Hallmark” is more compact and also sterile, giving it even more flower power.<br />

C. Bulbine frutescens ‘Shorty’ (Shorty Yellow Bulbine)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 15” x 18” /<br />

Origin: South Africa Family: Liliaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#372<br />

LPB<br />

This Bulbine’s name alludes to one of its winning attributes, its size. We’ve grown<br />

yellow Bulbines in the past that were nice but a little too tall. Shorty gives to the garden<br />

all the color, heat tolerance and toughness of other Bulbines along with the refined<br />

elegance of its compact size. A single plant in a 12” clay pot makes for an instant bouquet<br />

of continuous color from spring to frost. Bulbines are easy-to-grow succulents<br />

needing very little care, though removing spent flower stalks will keep them even<br />

more attractive. Some botanists place Bubine in the family Asphodelaceae, while<br />

others put it in Xanthorrhoeaceae along with Kniphofias and Aloes. In fact Bulbine’s<br />

sap does have similar properties as Aloe in treating insect bites, stings, and burns.<br />

D. Caesalpinia gilliesii (Bird of Paradise Shrub)<br />

Shrub / Sun / 60” x 60” / Zone 6b-10<br />

Origin: Argentina, Uruguay Family: Fabaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#104<br />

LPB<br />

Exotic flower bunches of yellow and pink atop this plants lacey blue-green leaves<br />

make it a must have for the landscape. Causing Bird of Paradise Shrub to be even<br />

more desirable is the fact that it blooms in the heat of summer, is drought tolerant<br />

and will grow in almost any soil. An extremely cold winter may kill it to<br />

the ground but it resprouts from the roots and recovers nicely. There are specimens<br />

here in Stillwater around 50 years old. Gardeners north of here should<br />

offer it winter protection of extra mulch and plant it with a southern exposure.<br />

E. Callicarpa dichotoma ‘Duet’ (Variegated Beautyberry)<br />

Shrub / Sun to Partial Shade / 6’ x 6’ / Zone 5-9<br />

Origin: China, Korea, Japan Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#287<br />

LPB<br />

Duet is a new release from the National Arboretum that is sure to be a hit with<br />

gardeners everywhere. A sport of the variety albafructus this beautyberry has<br />

small white berries in late summer and fall but by far its main attraction is its foliage.<br />

It has medium green leaves with distinct cream colored margins. An easy,<br />

pest-free, low-maintenance landscape plant, Duet was discovered in Cookeville,<br />

Tennessee back in 2000. We’ve been growing it since 2004 and absolutely love it.<br />

F. Callirhoe involucrata (Poppy Mallow)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 6” x 6’ / Zone 4-9<br />

Origin: Central US Family: Malvaceae<br />

$4.11<br />

#191<br />

SPB<br />

You can usually determine how much a wildflower has been noticed through the years<br />

by the number of charming common names it has been given. In addition to Poppy<br />

Mallow, this native perennial is also called Wine Cup and Cowboy Rose. It grows<br />

from a huge turnip-like taproot where it sends out ground-hugging stems up to 4’ in<br />

all directions. Because we do not water our native beds, Poppy mallow goes dormant<br />

in the summer and we simply clip away the faded stems. This satiny rose-purple<br />

flowering native resprouts a rosette of leaves in the fall that remain through winter.


G. Calylophus serrulatus (Half-Shrub Evening Primrose)<br />

Native Perennial/Shrub / Sun / 24” x 24” / Zone 5-10<br />

Origin: Central North America Family: Onagraceae<br />

$4.11<br />

#157<br />

SPB<br />

This is an attractive plant that can’t decide if it wants to be a perennial or a shrub,<br />

hence the common name. Most winters it dies back to about a third of the height<br />

of its above ground stems and resprouts there in the spring. When it does resprout,<br />

its branches are decorated with intense yellow four-petaled flowers through midsummer.<br />

Sometimes exhibiting red fall leaf color, Half-Shrub Evening Primrose,<br />

makes a nice drought tolerant garden plant with a tight habit and no spreading.<br />

H. Campanula punctata ‘Cherry Bells’<br />

$5.97<br />

(Cherry Bells Spotted Bellflower)<br />

#473<br />

LPB<br />

Perennial / Partial Shade to Shade / 18” x spreading /<br />

Zone 5-9 Origin: China, Japan, Siberia Family: Campanulaceae<br />

I’ve grown a number of Campanulas through the years and looked at what<br />

seems like hundreds of species and cultivars in various garden books. One<br />

thing most all of them had in common was poor performance in our southern<br />

heat. I was completely amazed several years ago when I grew the Asian species<br />

Campanula punctata and found that it thrives in our area. The plant will<br />

spread and become groundcover-like in moist fertile soil but I think it is worth<br />

it for its large nodding flowers of pinkish dusty rose. After it finishes blooming<br />

you can tidy it up by trimming the flower stalks, even with a weedeater.<br />

I. Capsicm annuum ‘Purple Flash’<br />

(Purple Flash Pepper)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 15”x 18” /<br />

Origin: Tropical America Family: Solanaceae<br />

Purple Flash Pepper looks stunning when planted by itself in a 12” white container. Of<br />

course it also looks great in other pots and flower beds with its beautiful black purple<br />

and violet splashed leaves. I’ve heard some gardeners talk about how they like the interesting<br />

architecture of its branches. This easy to grow plant produces show glossy<br />

black fruit, but don’t eat it, as it is very hot and not developed for taste. These ornamental<br />

pepper plants have been used a lot recently in the displays at the Dallas Arboretum.<br />

J. Centaurea ‘Colchester White’<br />

(Colchester White Centaurea)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 30” /<br />

Origin: Capri Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#506<br />

LPB<br />

Since I discovered Colchester White Centaurea, I haven’t planted the traditional<br />

bedding Dusty Miller ever again. This plant is so silvery it’s almost white, and<br />

much more elegant. Its leaves are large, intricately pinnatified and lend a sophisticated<br />

architectural touch to beds, borders, or containers. Colchester White Centaurea<br />

continues to be very popular at public display gardens all across North America.<br />

I particularly enjoyed their extensive use in large mixed containers at the Atlanta<br />

Botanical Garden a few years ago. This plant goes well with almost anything.<br />

K. Centratherum intermedium (Brazilian Button)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18”x 24” /<br />

Origin: Brazil Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#122<br />

LPB<br />

A great addition to butterfly gardens as well as the scented garden, Brazilian Button is<br />

one of those easy plants that delight so many. Its attractive purple flowers offer a unique<br />

and different look as they are produced all growing season. At the Oklahoma Gardening<br />

studio we included it in our fragrant plant collections for the delicious pineapple<br />

smell of its crushed leaves. This plant is usually hard to find, grows great in containers<br />

and is an excellent choice for a child’s garden with its unexpected and pleasant aroma.<br />

L. Centrosema virginianum (Spurred Butterfly Pea)<br />

Native Perennial Vine / Sun to Shade / 5’-8’ / Zone 5-10<br />

Origin: Southeast US Family: Fabaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#384<br />

LPB<br />

$5.97<br />

#219<br />

SPB<br />

Spurred Butterfly Pea is one of our most glamorous native perennial vines. It’s<br />

amazing how many European gardens have this plant while it remains absent from<br />

so many here in its native land. Putting-forth large (2” in diameter) showy flowers<br />

of pinkish lavender with white inner markings, I can’t imagine anyone not<br />

wanting it somewhere in their landscape. Growing and blooming favorably in<br />

full sun, it also performs quite well in moderate shade. This plant is often confused<br />

with Clitoria mariana, which lacks the small spur at the back of its flowers.<br />

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Cestrum<br />

Cestrums are quickly becoming one of my favorite<br />

new groups of plants. I think a lot of people probably<br />

do not realize how cold hardy they are. In our<br />

zone 6b Stillwater garden we grow them as die back<br />

shrubs, or what a lot of gardeners consider woody<br />

perennials. They are fully woody shrubs in areas<br />

further south of our nursery. There are around 175<br />

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A. Ceratotheca triloba (South African Foxglove)<br />

Annual / Sun / 5’ x 24” /<br />

Origin: South Africa Family: Pedaliaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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or so species in the genus native to tropical and subtropical<br />

regions of the Americas. Cestrums belong<br />

to the Solanaceae, or Nightshade Family so any of<br />

the small fruit they may produce should not be eaten.<br />

Research has shown that they are toxic only if large<br />

quantities are consumed. Their large flower clusters<br />

are attractive to hummingbirds and impart an exotic<br />

$5.97<br />

#216<br />

LPB<br />

I absolutely love plants in the Pedaliaceae family, and this tall annual is no exception.<br />

South African Foxglove has graced my garden with its presence for several<br />

years and never fails to provide interest and color. It starts blooming in late<br />

spring and continues until frost, with huge 4” tubular flowers of lavender-purple. If<br />

you’re lucky, you’ll have a few seedlings every year after planting it in your garden.<br />

tropical look to the garden. Gardeners and horticulturists<br />

everywhere are starting to appreciate these dependable<br />

and long-blooming heat-tolerant plants.<br />

B. Cestrum aurantiacum (Yellow Cestrum)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 48” x 48” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: South America Family: Solanaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#249<br />

LPB<br />

I first encountered Yellow Cestrum in southern Alabama in the summer of 1998. It<br />

was blooming profusely despite the hot steamy weather of the Deep South. Its inflorescences<br />

somewhat remind me of a Lilac shrub with its large clusters of golden<br />

yellow flowers. It isn’t immediately obvious that it belongs to the Solanaceae, or<br />

Nightshade family. Yellow Cestrum makes a fabulous container plant as well as an<br />

outstanding source of golden color in beds and borders all while attracting lots of<br />

butterflies and hummingbirds. I shared this tropical shrub with some fellow gardeners<br />

in Oklahoma City in 2001 where it has actually survived each winter ever since.<br />

C. Cestrum ‘Greystone Gold’ (Greystone Gold Cestrum)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 36” x 36” / Zone 7-10 Family: Solanaceae<br />

Origin: Hybrid of Central Americal, S Americal species<br />

$6.98<br />

#542<br />

LPB<br />

You’ve probably realized by now that Cestrums are some of our favorite plants<br />

here at <strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong>. Greystone Gold is a cultivar developed by North<br />

Carolina plant enthusiast Norman Beal. He was kind enough to share cuttings<br />

of this awesome plant with me during a tour of his garden in 2009. Its<br />

unique pale yellow bloom color is unlike anything we’ve seen in a hardy Cestrum.<br />

Just like the other Cestrums we offer, Greystone gold has the same<br />

winter hardiness, summer toughness and long season of flower production.<br />

D. Cestrum ‘Orange Peel’ (Orange Peel Cestrum)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 60” x 60” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Hybrid of 2 Trop American species Family: Solanaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#364<br />

LPB<br />

Orange Peel Cestrum is a gorgeous new perennial we’ve enjoyed in our garden the<br />

past few years. Gardeners south of us can utilize the plant as a woody shrub while<br />

those north of here can employ it in their seasonal displays as a tropical color plant.<br />

This hummingbird and butterfly attracting beauty begins flowering in June and continues<br />

non-stop through summers’ heat until the first frost. Its large multi-flowered<br />

bloom clusters are a magnificent yellow orange color. Introduced by Southern Perennials<br />

and Herbs Nursery, this most cold hardy of the Cestrums is becoming quite<br />

popular. As a member of the Solanaceae, no part of the plant should be eaten.<br />

E. Cestrum x cultam ‘Cretan Purple’ (Purple Cestrum)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 48” x 48” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Hybrid of Mexican & South American spp<br />

Family: Solanaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#368<br />

LPB<br />

A couple of reasons we like Cestrums are their large colorful flower clusters and<br />

their ability to bloom continuously in the heat. Purple Cestrum has surprised us<br />

with its ability to withstand our zone 6b winters. The unique violet/lavender blossoms<br />

of this hardier-than-realized plant are certainly treasured in our garden from<br />

summer through fall. It is a hybrid of a species from Mexico (Cestrum elegans) and<br />

a species from Chile (Cestrum parqui). Its common name, Cretan Purple, leads me<br />

to believe the cross was made on the Greek isle of Crete. We are told of them growing<br />

to tree form there on the island while here they only get about 3’ tall in a season.


G. Clerodendrum Incisum ‘Sauti’<br />

(Musical Notes Clerodendrum)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Tropical Africa Family: Verbenaceae<br />

Clerodendrum incisum has been brown here in the US for many years, but I<br />

don’t think gardeners have ever experienced a selection quite like ‘Sauti’. It<br />

is set apart due to its unusual deeply lobed foliage, which somewhat resembles<br />

that of a Chinese Horned Holly. We spotted this unique-leaved Musical Notes<br />

plant near the coast of southwestern Kenya on our 2009 expedition and knew<br />

we had something special. The flowers, which keep coming in repeated flushes<br />

no matter how hot the summer, resemble tall white musical notes when in bud,<br />

then open to unfurl long purple stamens. We gave it the Swahili name Sauti,<br />

which means musical note. <strong>Plant</strong> this 2011 <strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong> introduction in<br />

a patio container and get ready to answer all your guests “What is it?” questions.<br />

H. Clitoria ternatea (Double-Flowering Blue Butterfly Pea)<br />

Tropical Vine / Sun / 6’-8’ /<br />

Origin: Tropical Asia Family: Fabaceae<br />

$7.47<br />

#488<br />

LPB<br />

Visitors to our garden always ask about this beautiful vine. The intense cobalt blue<br />

flower color it exhibits is rare in the botanical world. This hard-to-find double form<br />

yields a plethora of robust blooms throughout the growing season, without slowing<br />

in the heat of summer. A great twinning climber for training on a fence, archway<br />

or a support in a patio container. The plants we offer are grown from cuttings and<br />

not seeds to maintain this exceptional clone. One of our all time favorite vines.<br />

Coleus<br />

I think almost everyone who has ever done ornamental<br />

gardening has grown coleus at one time or<br />

another. Most gardeners I talk to remember their<br />

parents and grandparents including it in their gardens<br />

in the past. In the mint family, its new botanical<br />

name is Plectranthus scutellarioides and occasionally<br />

referred to as Painted Nettle. Coleus hybrids<br />

were first introduced to England in the 1860’s and<br />

quickly became popular, spurring on the frenzy of<br />

I. Coleus (‘Alabama Sunset’ Coleus)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18-24” x 18-24” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#130<br />

LPB<br />

$5.97<br />

#391<br />

LPB<br />

I’ve been enamored with Alabama Sunset Coleus ever since I first saw it planted at<br />

the Woodward Park office in Tulsa when I worked there in the mid 1980’s. There is<br />

something so appealing about its beautiful color combination of pink and yellow that<br />

compels lots of gardeners to list it as a must-have plant for their gardens. The yellow<br />

color comes on stronger with heat and more light, in fact they often look mostly pink on<br />

the greenhouse bench in the spring. Alabama Sunset Coleus is also known by a wealth<br />

of other names including; Bellingrath Pink, Texas Parkinglot and Shocking Pink.<br />

J. Coleus (‘Anna’ Coleus)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18-24” x 18-24” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#478<br />

LPB<br />

It’s hard to believe this delicate pastel colored coleus can stand up to hot, all day, full<br />

sun. Well that’s exactly where we’ve grown it the last few years and it has looked<br />

wonderful. Anna’s medium-sized ruffled leaves are pale pink with a green center and<br />

sprinkled with color patches. If the color patch is in the green portion, its hue is dark<br />

burgundy wine, while the color patches in the pale pink portion are a contrasting hot<br />

pink. This combination of color is further enhanced by the medium pink undersides<br />

of the leaves. Anna makes a nice show even as a single plant in a patio container.<br />

K. Coleus (‘Black Patent Leather’ Coleus)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Southern Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

breeding for new colors. In the last 150 years interest<br />

has increased and waned but has seemed to really<br />

pick up steam since the early 1990’s. Coleus interest<br />

and breeding is currently very high with around<br />

1500 or more officially listed cultivars. Available<br />

in a plethora of gorgeous colors, leaf, shapes, patterns<br />

and combinations, there is truly a coleus for<br />

everyone. The selections we offer are intended for<br />

growing in full sun or partial shade. Keep in mind<br />

$5.97<br />

#479<br />

LPB<br />

I think I could claim a new favorite coleus every year, and for 2011 I would have to<br />

say my choice is Black Patent Leather. The leaves of this beautiful foliage plant are<br />

so incredibly black and have the most unique bubbly textured surface. Shared with us<br />

by the gardeners at Chanticleer, this coleus also goes by the name of Shiny Shoes. It<br />

doesn’t try to flower much but does need a little pinching back to keep it bushy. Black<br />

Patent Leather Coleus looks great in containers or combined with plants that have gold,<br />

silver or white foliage and also contrasts well with lightly colored flowering plants.<br />

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that the colors may vary slightly depending on light<br />

level, temperature change and to a small degree, soil<br />

fertility. We will continue to collect and offer more<br />

of these easy-to-grow foliage plants as they are one<br />

of the most reliable sources of brilliant garden color.<br />

www.bustaniplantfarm.com 17<br />

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A. Coleus (‘Chuluota’ Coleus)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18-24” x 18-24” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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$5.97<br />

#388<br />

LPB<br />

We’ve grown Chuluota Coleus for a few years now and have been well pleased<br />

with its performance in our beds and containers. It was selected for its great<br />

heat tolerance, being named for the city of Chuluota, Florida which is located<br />

just a little northeast of Orlando. Lots of gardeners like its showy leaves<br />

with their rust-red centers surrounded by a unique goldish-tan coloring. The<br />

wavy leaf edges also give Chuluota Coleus an interesting textural quality.<br />

B. Coleus (‘Finger Paint’ Coleus)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

This striking coleus features a brilliant color display on its leaves. The pattern<br />

resembles what children might create by dipping their fingers in burgundy or red<br />

pain and tracing them over leaves of green, cream and gold. The separation of the<br />

color blotches is quite bold and attractive. If you get a branch with all red or all<br />

gold, simply pinch it out to maintain the pattern. One of our employees, Mary,<br />

claims Finger Paint Coleus as her favorite plant of all we grow here at the nursery.<br />

This coleus was introduced by Pam Baggett of Cedar Grove, North Carolina.<br />

C. Coleus (‘Freckles’ Coleus) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

D. Coleus (‘Duke of Swirl’ Coleus)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asea Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#357<br />

LPB<br />

$5.97<br />

#538<br />

LPB<br />

It is interesting that this beautiful sun coleus goes by the name of Freckles<br />

because it doesn’t have any spots. Instead its bright festive leaves are<br />

pale yellow but covered almost completely with large orange splotches<br />

with a tiny bit of bronze. Freckles is a dynamic plant for beds and containers,<br />

providing a special touch due to the rarity of orange foliage plants. The<br />

color looks outstanding paired with blue flowers, or dark purple or silver<br />

foliage. For best appearance, be sure to pinch out any flowers it tries to produce.<br />

$5.97<br />

#483<br />

LPB<br />

This gorgeous new coleus is similar to last year’s very popular Fingerpaint. A patchwork<br />

pattern of irregular splotches of color decorate each leaf. Developed by Chris<br />

Baker of Ohio, Duke of Swirl features a color mix of red, burgundy, tan, orange,<br />

cream and an occasional patch of green. Well suited for a spot in full sun, this multihued<br />

foliage plant delivers a sharp burst of color to mixed plantings and containers.<br />

E. Coleus (‘Large Marge’ Coleus) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#647<br />

LPB<br />

In our quest to find durable sun coleus that offer a different look than what is available,<br />

we present Large Marge. It is the size of its leaves that sets this coleus apart.<br />

They are wide and yellow with a bit of reddish marking in the center. Large Marge<br />

plants are compact and form a nice mound with no pinching necessary. This<br />

coleus is from coleus breeding and selecting program of Chris Baker in Ohio.<br />

F. Coleus (‘Nuggett’ Coleus)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18-24” x 18-24” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#395<br />

LPB<br />

Nugget Coleus is a brightly-colored sun-tolerant selection with a small compact habit<br />

that doesn’t get as large as some of the other varieties. Its attractive leaves have frilly edges<br />

of gold with brilliant red speckled centers. An introduction by Vern Ogren, Nugget is<br />

a great addition to beds and borders and also makes an interesting container specimen.


G. Coleus (‘Orange King’ Coleus)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

There are a lot of sun Coleus out there with new selections available every<br />

year. Orange King has been around for a few years but remains a favorite<br />

of gardeners everywhere. I love its unique buckskin-yellowish-tan leaves that<br />

have a burgundy glow on the undersides. It combines well with lots of other<br />

foliage plants and performs wonderfully well as an outside bedding or container<br />

plant. A single plant in a 10-12” container makes an impressive display.<br />

H. Coleus (‘Peters Wonder’ Coleus)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Shade / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#274<br />

LPB<br />

We are pleased with the performance of this new Coleus selection after evaluating<br />

it in our test gardens. Peter’s Wonder, also called Pete’s Wonder, has attractive<br />

frilly leaves with doubly serrated edges with colors of green, pink, deep violet and<br />

cream. A good outdoor performer, this new selection was made by Jaldety Nursery<br />

in Isreal. The color of Coleus foliage in some varieties can vary depending on<br />

several factors such as: light, temperature, time of year, latitude and soil fertility.<br />

I. Coleus (‘Pineapple Sun’ Coleus)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#273<br />

LPB<br />

A colorful Coleus with a somewhat different color pattern is the selection known as<br />

Pineapple Sun. It has golden leaves with deep purple on the stems, the leaf bases,<br />

parts of the leaf veins and random splashes on other parts. The bright gold highlighted<br />

by the dark purple really distinguishes this selection from other yellow varieties.<br />

We absolutely love Pineapple Sun Coleus used as a single specimen in a container.<br />

J. Coleus (‘Stu Junior’ Coleus)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Southeast Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#554<br />

LPB<br />

Each year we trial several new sun Coleus for their ability to hold their color during<br />

the heat of the summer. The extreme summer of 2011 was hot enough to make many<br />

Coleus varieties fade out or burn. A showy coleus that passed the 2011 test with flying<br />

colors was Stu Junior. It showed excellent fade resistance with its leaves of yellow<br />

with burgundy-red centers and maintained a nice compact mounding habit without the<br />

need for pinching. It has quickly become an immediate favorite here at the nursery.<br />

K. Coreopsis integrifolia (Chipola River Daisy)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 36” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: GA, FL Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#562<br />

LPB<br />

I was given this plant by a friend at the Wichita Botanical Garden a few years<br />

ago and after growing it a while, I now think it’s the bee’s knees. Chipola River<br />

Daisy is a fall blooming member of the Coreopsis clan that is found in the wild<br />

only along the Chipola River in southern Georgia and the Florida panhandle.<br />

Despite its deep south origin, this rare perennial has been fully winter hardy in<br />

Wichita, KS for over 16 years. Its floral display consists of huge golden daisies<br />

with dark black centers which are quite a delight for both gardeners and butterflies.<br />

L. Crossandra nilotica (Crossandra (Orange))<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 12” x 12” /<br />

Origin: Tropical Africa Family: Acanthaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#514<br />

LPB<br />

$5.97<br />

#125<br />

LPB<br />

Our form of this plant came from a nursery in Nairobi, Kenya where we picked<br />

it up in 2002. This Crossandra is not your ordinary house plant. An outstanding<br />

patio container plant, its flowers are fully orange and more plentiful than those<br />

normally encountered. There are more flower spikes produced on this continuous<br />

bloomer, and they are held higher above the foliage. A reliable hot-weather flowering<br />

tropical, it looks great when combined with blue or yellow blooming plants.<br />

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A. Cuphea ‘David Verity’ (David Verity Cigar <strong>Plant</strong>)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Lythraceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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$5.97<br />

#126<br />

LPB<br />

If I could grow only one cuphea, this would be it. David verity cigar plant is unmatched<br />

when it comes to flower size and number of blooms. This hummingbird magnet makes<br />

all other cigar plant’s flowers seem like mere cigarettes in size comparison. An easy to<br />

grow crapemyrtle relative, it produces its multitudes of orange flowers from spring to<br />

first frost. David Verity is a hybrid between Cuphea ignea and Cuphea micropetala.<br />

It is one of the best hummingbird attracting plants in our display gardens each year.<br />

B. Cuphea Llavea (Bat-Face Cuphea) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Mexico Family: Lythraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#640<br />

LPB<br />

It’s easy to see how this cute little plant gets its name. The flowers have a<br />

dark purplish black face with two big red ears and look like the cuddly fuzzy<br />

mug of a bat. I’ve grown this easy and constantly blooming plant off and on<br />

for years, dating back to my days as Garden Manager for Oklahoma Gardening.<br />

Bat-Face Cuphea is related to Mexican Heather and Crapemyrtle so you<br />

know it has built in heat tolerance and flower power. It can both fill and spill<br />

in a mixed container and also attracts hummingbirds and butterflies. On the<br />

chance it gets a little large for its space, just cut it back and it will bloom fine.<br />

C. Cuphea ‘Susan’s Little Gem’<br />

(Susan’s Little Gem Cuphea)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 18” x 24” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Lythraceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#222<br />

LPB<br />

We are always on the lookout for garden-worthy Cupheas and ‘Susan’s Little<br />

Gem’ certainly fits the bill. Its flowers of white and pink are small but continually<br />

produced at such a high rate that it makes for a delightful garden<br />

show. I wouldn’t do a mass planting of Susan’s Little Gem but rather a sprinkling<br />

among a mixed border or a mixed container, where its small blooms and<br />

small leaves complement numerous types of other plants. Hardier than we first<br />

thought, it has survived our last several winters. Add this little mounding cutie<br />

to your garden for something new and different and of course, heat-tolerant.<br />

D. Dianthus (Southern Heirloom) (Heirloom Dianthus)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 18” x 24” / Zone 6-9<br />

Origin: Europe Family: Caryophyllaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#264<br />

LPB<br />

This Southern heirloom perennial was given to us by our friend “Dr. Dirt” from Jackson,<br />

Mississippi. He is a genuine gardener that I met in 2005 with a true knack for<br />

growing plants. I was in Jackson doing a gardening radio show with him and Felder<br />

Rushing and got to visit his home garden. The dianthus has no doubt graced many a<br />

hot and humid garden throughout the gulf coast area for decades. With its dark green<br />

leaves and deep red springtime flowers, it has definitely been a winner in my garden.<br />

E. Dianthus carthusianorum (Cluster-Head Dianthus)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 30” x 18” / Zone 5-9<br />

Origin: Central and Southern Europe Family: Caryophyllaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#300<br />

LPB<br />

This is a dianthus that most gardeners aren’t familiar with but would love to grow<br />

if they ever saw it. A tall member of the genus with a see-through frame, it is<br />

topped with clusters of up to 50 deep magenta blooms on each stem. This butterfly<br />

attractor is still going strong in my garden after several years. Visitors who<br />

see it always want to grow it in their gardens. A native of central and southern<br />

Europe, it has been grown in France by Carthusian Monks since the 18th Century.<br />

F. Dianthus gratianopolitanus ‘Raspberry Fire’<br />

(Raspberry Fire Dianthus) NEW<br />

Perennial / Sun / 10” x 18” / Zone 4-10<br />

Origin: Europe Family: Caryophyllaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#653<br />

LPB<br />

Raspberry Fire Dianthus is a <strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong> selection out of seedlings that<br />

are a few generations down the road from Fire Witch, a cultivar with which we’ve<br />

had great success. It sports flowers of a unique pinkish red color with leaves that<br />

are an attractive blue. Flowers appear heavy in spring then intermittently through<br />

summer and fall, more if spent blooms removed. The parent Fire Witch and its<br />

offspring tolerate heat and humidity better than most Dianthus. This species is<br />

often called Cheddar Pink, owing its name to a population that grows in Cheddar<br />

Gorge in Somerset England, the same area known for its famous cheese.


G. Dianthus japonicus (Japanese Dianthus)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 24” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: Japan, East Asia Family: Caryophyllaceae<br />

Virtually unknown to most gardeners but poised to burst onto the scene, is this outstanding<br />

new perennial. There are two features about this species that distinguish<br />

it from other Dianthus. It has very undianthus-like shiny glossy leaves, which are<br />

evergreen in the south and it is later blooming, beginning in summer and continuing<br />

till frost. The pinkish-lavender flowers of Japanese Dianthus are a welcomed sight<br />

in the summer perennial garden. Known in Japan as Hama-nadeshiko, it is found<br />

growing naturally on coastal cliffs and sandy beaches, so a well-drained soil is a good<br />

idea. Remove faded bloom clusters to tidy up and if you don’t want a few seedlings.<br />

H. Dicliptera suberecta (King’s Crown)<br />

Tropical/Slightly hardy Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade /<br />

18” x 30” / Zone 7-10 Origin: Uruguay Family: Acanthaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#363<br />

LPB<br />

The soft leaves of King’s Crown make it a garden worthy plant because their silvery<br />

color combines well with so many plants. Add to that, this plant’s summer profusion<br />

of bright red-orange tubular flowers and it’s easy to see why gardeners everywhere<br />

just have to have it. Heat and drought tolerant, King’s Crown is also an absolute<br />

delight to hummingbirds. Listed hardy to zone 7, we’ve over-wintered it for several<br />

years in a raised bed with extra mulch in our zone 6b garden. From a plant family that<br />

gives us numerous showy tropicals, the Acanthaceae, this beauty is from Uruguay.<br />

I. Duranta erecta ‘Lime’ (Lime Duranta) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Tropical America, Jamaica Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#164<br />

LPB<br />

Long lasting dependable and durable foliage is what you get with this Duranta. Its<br />

chartreuse leaves provide non-fading color throughout the hottest summers. Lime<br />

Duranta is a bushy and compact plant that doesn’t need pinching and works great<br />

to create small hedges for edging masses of bedding plants in color spots. A common<br />

name for Duranta is Golden Dewdrop referring to the color of its small fruit.<br />

J. Dyschoriste oblongifolia<br />

(Oblongleaf Twinflower) NEW<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 12” x 36” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: SE US Family: Acanthaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#649<br />

LPB<br />

The multitude of tubular pale purple flowers of Oblongleaf Twinflower are<br />

somewhat Ruellia-like in appearance. Their buds from in pairs on opposite<br />

sides of the stem and open at the same time, giving the plant its common<br />

name. You get a big show of flowers in the spring along with a good amount<br />

of supplemental blooms until frost. This low-growing perennial can be used as<br />

a ground cover or a front of the border plant. In addition to its showy blooms<br />

and low mounding from, Oblongleaf Twinflower is also valuable to have in<br />

the garden because it is a larval host plant for the common Buckeye Butterfly.<br />

K. Ecbolium amplexicaule (Green Swan Flower)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: East and South Africa Family: Acanthaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#625<br />

LPB<br />

This is one of the true gems we collected on our 2009 Kenya plant expedition.<br />

Available for the first time in 2012, we are most likely the only source in the US and<br />

possibly the world for Green Swan Flower. Its exotic turquoise-green blooms entice<br />

everyone who sees them. An African Savannah plant occasionally fed upon by<br />

Rhinos, we collected it alongside the Kenya-Uganda railway not far from the Tsavo<br />

River. The construction site of the railway bridge over the river was where the famed<br />

man-eating lions of Tsavo killed and ate 35 railroad workers in 1898. This plant<br />

has performed brilliantly in both flower beds and containers here at our nursery.<br />

L. Echinacea angustifolia<br />

(Narrow-Leaf Purple Coneflower)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 24” x 18” / Zone 3-9<br />

Origin: Central US and Canada Family: Asteraceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#541<br />

LPB<br />

$5.97<br />

#172<br />

SPB<br />

Sometimes called Black Sampson for its thick black tap root, this plant is a<br />

better choice for xeric plantings than the more common Purple Coneflower,<br />

E. purpurea, and every bit as attractive. Its stature is a little shorter but its<br />

flower heads are about the same size and equally effective at feeding droves<br />

of butterflies. Narrow-Leaf Purple Coneflower is a prairie plant performing<br />

best in a well-drained soil in full sun and kept on the dry side. Don’t overcrowd<br />

this native perennial and give it time to get established in your garden.<br />

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A. Echinacea pallida (Pale Purple Coneflower)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 30” x 12” / Zone 3-10<br />

Origin: Central and Eastern N. America Family: Asteraceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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$5.97<br />

#180<br />

SPB<br />

This coneflower is taller with large heads of narrow drooping rayflorets that<br />

give the plant an elegant spidery look. As its name implies, Pale Purple Coneflower<br />

has a lighter coloration in its blooms yet very worthy of a spot in the<br />

garden. Butterflies constantly visit its unique flowers perched atop tall sturdy<br />

stems. This coneflower is a member of the Tallgrass Prairie plant community.<br />

B. Echinaceae purpurea (Baby Swan White Coneflower)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 24” x 24” / Zone 4-10 NEW<br />

Origin: Eastern US Family: Asteraceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#638<br />

LPB<br />

This butterfly attracting perennial is a selection of one of our showy native<br />

species. It has a refined compact form with a long bloom season and<br />

is very well-branched to give more flower stems. Baby Swan White Coneflower<br />

is often referred to as a pocket-sized version of the popular White Swan<br />

cultivar. Its gleaning white flower heads with gold cones can measure up to 5<br />

inches across, and come on earlier than other coneflower selections. Like other<br />

Echinaceas it is long-lived and moderately drought tolerant once established.<br />

C. Echinocereus reichenbachii ssp. Baileyi<br />

(Bailey’s Hedgehog Cactus) NEW<br />

Perennial / Sun / 10” x 10” / Zone 5-10<br />

Origin: OK, TX Family: Cactaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#639<br />

SPB<br />

From only a few locations in southwestern Oklahoma and nearby Texas comes<br />

this cool little native cactus. Perfectly sized for rock gardens or a spot at the<br />

front of a raised bed, it puts forth huge pink springtime flowers that measure<br />

up to 5 inches across. Attractive even when not in bloom, these cacti<br />

are densely hairy with spines that can be white, yellow, reddish, brownish<br />

or pinkish. Gardeners everywhere like this group of Hedgehog or Lace<br />

Cactus because they are some of the most cold and moisture tolerant cacti.<br />

D. Eranthemum nigrum (Black Leaved Sky Flower)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Solomon Islands Family: Acanthaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#107<br />

LPB<br />

A truly bold foliage plant with ultra dark almost black leaves, Black Leaved Sky<br />

Flower is an easy and instant show piece of the garden as it provides great contrast<br />

for almost anything, especially variegated plants. It creates its own combination of<br />

color contrast in summer and fall when it puts forth spikes of showy white flowers<br />

with pinkish centers. No stranger to heat and humidity it is native to the Solomon<br />

Islands. Black leaved sky flower looks stunning when planted as a single specimen<br />

in a container or grouped with others. Be sure to let it dry between waterings.<br />

E. Erythrina x bidwillii (Coral Bean Hybrid)<br />

Shrub / Sun to Partial Shade / 5’ x 5’ / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Fabaceae<br />

$19.95<br />

#123<br />

GAL<br />

Few plants rival the beauty of this Coral Bean, with its huge inflorescenses<br />

of dramatic deep red. The amazingly long 24” terminal racemes are packed<br />

with flowers 2” in length. I think a great deal of gardeners would be growing<br />

it if they only knew it existed. A hybrid usually listed hardy to zone 8, it has<br />

survived every winter in our zone 6b garden since I planted it in 2000. Its shrubby<br />

branches die back to the ground each winter, but with each new spring come<br />

new sprouts from the root which are later topped with those incredible flowers.<br />

Hummingbirds are continually drawn to the blossoms of this striking legume.


Eucomis<br />

We have several clumps of Pineapple Lilies that<br />

have been growing here in our zone 6b Stillwater<br />

garden for more than 10 years. Not bad for a<br />

plant that many sources list as hardy to only zone<br />

8. These perennials are definitely more cold hardy<br />

than people realize. Members of the Lily Family,<br />

they come from the summer rainfall areas of South<br />

Africa and grow from bulbs. These plants are named<br />

as such because each bloom cluster resembles a<br />

G. Eucomis ‘Oakhurst’ (Oakhurst Pineapple Lily)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 20” x 18” / Zone 6b-9<br />

Origin: South Africa Family: Liliaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#551<br />

LPB<br />

Oakhurst Pineapple Lily is probably the darkest leaved variety we have grown. It<br />

holds its color a little better than Sparkling Burgundy when the weather gets extremely<br />

hot. This bulbous perennial also exhibits excellent cold hardiness. Its dark<br />

strap-like leaves make a great contrast with other forms of plants, especially those<br />

with silver or chartreuse leaves or pink flowers. Originally discovered at a nursery<br />

in San Diego, CA, be sure to give it a year after planting before you expect flowers.<br />

H. Eucomis pallidiflora subsp pole-evansii<br />

(Giant Pineapple Lily)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 42” x 36” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: South Africa Family: Liliaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#539<br />

LPB<br />

A very impressive and seldom offered perennial that brings an instant impact to<br />

the garden is Giant Pineapple Lily. An amazing architectural plant with its stiffly<br />

upright vase-forming foliage, it has leaves up to 10” wide and can grow up to<br />

six feet tall though ours usually top out a little under 4’ in this area. The largest<br />

species of the genus, it blooms in mid to late summer with a sturdy flower<br />

stem packed with green flowers. We’ve grown several of these wonderful<br />

plants in our garden where they have been winter hardy for more than ten years.<br />

I. Eucomis ‘Sparkling Burgundy’<br />

(Sparkling Burgundy Pineapple Lily)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 20” x 18” / Zone 6b-9<br />

Origin: South Africa Family: Liliaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#218<br />

LPB<br />

A South African perennial I’ve enjoyed for several years in the Oklahoma<br />

Gardening studio. I planted it there in the late 90’s and remember being<br />

utterly thrilled the first spring it flowered. This is one of those remarkable<br />

and completely different plants that we plant nuts enjoy so much.<br />

Introduced by Tony Avent of North Carolina, this maroon-leaved member of the<br />

Lily family sports blooms that really do resemble the fruit of a pineapple. Winter<br />

hardy and summer hardy, it does seem to appreciate a little afternoon shade.<br />

J. Eucomis ‘Tugela Ruby’ (Tugela Ruby Pineapple Lily)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” / Zone 6b-10<br />

Origin: South Africa Family: Liliaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#376<br />

LPB<br />

Pineapple Lilies are a group of summer flowering perennials that we continue<br />

to collect and add to our garden. Tugela Ruby is a new offering developed<br />

by Eddie Welsh of New Zealand. It has dense spikes of rose pink bloom stalks<br />

amid ruby-tinted foliage that turns even darker in the cool weather of spring<br />

and fall. The individual flowers have ivory petals with a purple center. As<br />

time progresses, the ivory changes to pink, creating a beautiful color display.<br />

Pineapple Lily’s botanical name is from the Greek word Eukomos meaning<br />

“beautifully haired”, and refers to the short leaves on top of the flower stems.<br />

K. Euphorbia continifolia ‘Atropurpurea’<br />

(Caribbean Copper <strong>Plant</strong>)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 3-4’ x 3’ /<br />

Origin: Mexico, Caribbean Isles Family: Euphorbiaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#117<br />

LPB<br />

Whether grown in a patio container or planted in a mixed border, Caribbean Copper<br />

<strong>Plant</strong> delivers a sleek velvety look to the garden. A dependable source of intense<br />

color in summer, this foliage plant’s color can be described as wine-burgundy or<br />

coppery-purple. It grows into a small tree in its native Mexico and Caribbean Isles<br />

and can reach higher than 15’’ As a tender specimen in temperate areas it will<br />

of course be shorter. As a Euphorbia, gardeners with skin reactions to the sap of<br />

these plants should take care. It looks dynamite combined with gold foliage plants.<br />

pineapple fruit perched on top of a sturdy stem and<br />

topped with a small tuft of leaves much like the foliage<br />

cap we see on a pineapple. Their botanical name<br />

is from the Greek work Eukomos, meaning “beautifully<br />

haired”, and refers to this tuft of leaves. Their<br />

other leaves are long and strap-like radiating out<br />

gracefully from the center of the clump and contrast<br />

beautifully with other perennials. We send potted<br />

and growing pineapple lily plants with leaves and<br />

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roots and not merely a dormant bulb. This way your<br />

plant has a jump start on getting established quicker<br />

and more readily able to survive winter when it<br />

arrives. Look for them to begin flowering their<br />

second season, with more and more bloom stalks in<br />

following years.<br />

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Gaillardia<br />

The thing I like most about Gaillardias is their<br />

ability to continually produce flowers throughout<br />

the heat of summer and fall. Their toughness,<br />

drought tolerance, rich colors and ability to attract<br />

butterflies are also good reasons to have them in<br />

the garden. Owing their botanical name to 18th<br />

century French Botanist M. Gaillard de Charentonneau,<br />

they are commonly known as Blanket Flowers,<br />

Indian Blankets or simply Gaillardias. There are<br />

around 15 or so species native to the US, a few in<br />

Mexico, and interestingly, 3 species in Argentina.<br />

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A. Euphorbia tirucalli ‘Sticks on Fire’ (Red Pencil <strong>Plant</strong>)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 2-4’ x 2-3’ /<br />

Origin: South Africa Family: Euphorbiaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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One species, G. aristata, extends north into Canada.<br />

We have 4 species native to Oklahoma with one<br />

of those being G. pulchella, which became our<br />

official State Wildflower in 1986. Of course, our<br />

official state floral emblem is still mistletoe. The 2<br />

aforementioned G. aristata and G. pulchella are the<br />

most common and widespread species and thus the<br />

most often used in breeding programs. There are<br />

around 30 or more cultivars derived from these 2<br />

parents which are usually listed a G. x grandiflora.<br />

These hybrids bloom their heads off but unfortu-<br />

$5.97<br />

#200<br />

LPB<br />

Talk about a plant offering a riot of color to beds or containers. Sticks on Fire’s festive<br />

colored branches of reddish-gold, peach and yellow are a striking departure from<br />

the original green Pencil <strong>Plant</strong>. This is one of those prized sub-tropical beauties that<br />

you’ll probably want to over-winter as a houseplant each year. In its native South<br />

Africa, the original all-green form makes a tree to 25’ or more, but this election has<br />

less chlorophyll and will probably max out at about 6-8’ where winter hardy. As a<br />

Euphorbia, gardeners with skin reactions to the sap of these plants should take care.<br />

B. Gaillardia aestivalis var. flavovirens<br />

(Prairie Gaillardia)<br />

Native Annual/Short-lived Perennial / Sun / 24” x 24” /<br />

Zone 6-10 Origin: South and Central US Family: Asteraceae<br />

$4.11<br />

#194<br />

SPB<br />

Non-stop flowering throughout summer’s heat and drought is what you get<br />

with Prairie Gaillardia. We grow them as annuals even though they often behave<br />

as biennials or short-lived perennials. In summer we do not water our<br />

native beds and remarkably, these plants are perhaps the showiest members<br />

in the collection during the dry 100 degree weather. The multitudes of yellow<br />

daisies with purplish centers just keep coming all growing season. Each<br />

spring we thin the seedlings, leaving a few strategically placed individuals.<br />

C. Gaillardia ‘Arizona Red Shades’<br />

(Arizona Red Shades Gaillardia)<br />

Perennial (3-4yrs) / Sun / 18” x 18” / Zone 3-9<br />

Origin: Hybrid - US Family: Asteraceae<br />

nately do not always last a great many years. The<br />

reason is that G. aristata is a perennial and G.<br />

pulchella is an annual, which supplies its shortlived<br />

genetics to the offspring. Most gardeners are<br />

content however to plant them every year because<br />

of their immense flower power. The hybrids are<br />

more likely to over-winter in the South and have a<br />

better chance everywhere if they are grown in full<br />

sun, a well-drained poor soil and not over watered.<br />

$5.97<br />

#532<br />

LPB<br />

A new and vibrant color is what you get from this member of the Arizona series of<br />

Gaillardias. The four inch blooms are what I would call a bright crimson burgundy<br />

with dark centers. Arizona Red Shades Gaillardia has the same compact structure as<br />

others in the series with non-stop flower production to draw in hordes of butterflies.<br />

Because it is a seed produced cultivar, about 20% will have yellow tips on the petals<br />

(ray florets). Remember, Gaillardias like it hot and sunny and a little on the dry side.<br />

D. Gaillardia ‘Arizona Sun’ (Arizona Sun Gaillardia)<br />

Perennial (3-4yrs) / Sun / 18” x 18” / Zone 3-9<br />

Origin: Hybrid - US Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#142<br />

LPB<br />

With daisies measuring 3 inches in diameter, this Gaillardia is a real winner, an All-<br />

American Selections winner in 2005 to be exact. Arizona Sun’s rayflorets have an<br />

interesting bicolor pattern of yellowish-orange and burgundy-red. A wonderful perennial<br />

for bright sunny spots kept a little on the dry side. Utilize this compact plant<br />

in beds, borders or containers for its continual display of butterfly-attracting blooms.<br />

E. Gaillardia ‘Burgundy’ (Burgundy Gaillardia)<br />

Perennial (3-4yrs) / Sun / 18” x 18” / Zone 3-9<br />

Origin: Hybrid - US Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#143<br />

LPB<br />

Tough and easy to grow, this Gaillardia keeps producing its large single daisies<br />

of solid burgundy. Loving the heat of summer and dry conditions, Burgundy<br />

Gaillardia grows to around 2 to 3 feet and is adored by butterflies. It<br />

looks terrific in combination with yellow blooming plants. A plant developed<br />

with genetics of both perennial and annual species, it is considered a perennial,<br />

lasting 3 or 4 seasons. They flower so heavily, many gardeners treat<br />

them as annuals and count any additional years of return as an added bonus.


G. Gaillardia ‘Mesa Yellow’ (Mesa Yellow Gaillardia) NEW<br />

Perennial / Sun / 18” x 22” / Zone 5-9<br />

Origin: Hybrid - US Family: Asteraceae<br />

Mesa Yellow is our new favorite all yellow Gaillardia. The large flowers and short<br />

compact frame are the top attributes of this fine plant. We had grown the selection Yellow<br />

Queen for years but this new comer out performs it in the garden. We are always<br />

on the lookout for better, more improved plants. Mesa Yellow’s flowers are freely produced<br />

in the heat and absolutely relished by butterflies. Hybrid Gaillardias are more<br />

apt to survive our Oklahoma winters if they are grown in a well drained soil in full sun.<br />

H. Gaillardia ‘Punch Bowl’ (Punch Bowl Gaillardia)<br />

Annual / Sun / 18” x 18” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: Hybrid - US Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#650<br />

LPB<br />

We grew Punch Bowl Gaillardia for the first time during the brutally hot record<br />

summer of 2011. Its response was non-stop flowering right through the<br />

heat. Punch Bowl sports blooms that are a new and unique color for Gaillardia.<br />

They are dark pink with a touch of lavender and have white frilly edges.<br />

Easy, heat tolerant and great for attracting butterflies, Punch Bowl is well deserving<br />

of place alongside all the other great Gaillardias we use in the garden.<br />

I. Gaillardia suavis (Rayless Gaillardia)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 24” x 18” / Zone 5-9<br />

Origin: OK, KS, TX Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#557<br />

LPB<br />

Rayless Gaillardia is one of my favorite native perennials because of its simplistic<br />

elegance. Every spring, from a rosette of dark green leaves, rise several straight<br />

flower scapes each topped with a single ball-like inflorescence of burnt-orange disc<br />

florets. They are somewhat lolli-pop-like in appearance and emit the most delicious<br />

fragrance, explaining why the plant is sometimes called Perfume Balls. On numerous<br />

occasions, I’ve witnessed at least 4 or 5 species of butterflies nectoring on an<br />

individual plant. Named Rayless Gaillardia because it lacks ray florets, there are<br />

populations in Texas of Gaillardia suavis that actually have them. Rayless Gaillardia<br />

may take a vacation in summer and go dormant, returning when fall arrives.<br />

J. Gaillardia ‘Tokajer’ (Tokajer Gaillardia)<br />

Perennial (3-4yrs) / Sun / 24” x 26” / Zone 2-9<br />

Origin: Hybrid - US Family: Asteraceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#558<br />

LPB<br />

Tokajer Gaillardia is a perennial selection developed in Germany that sports<br />

large daisies of an interesting color. The huge 4 inch flower heads are a unique<br />

mango-orange-brown with the rayflorets becoming darker toward the center.<br />

Blooming summer to fall, it is sure to delight the butterflies that visit your garden.<br />

K. Gmelina philippensis (Yellow Lobster Claw) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 40” x 40” /<br />

Origin: SE Asia, India, Philippines Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#145<br />

LPB<br />

With a flowering structure unlike anything we’ve seen before, Yellow Lobster Claw<br />

is one of the coolest new tropicals we’ve grown lately. Its growth habit is that of a<br />

scandant shrub similar to a Bouganvillea, producing large yellow paired flowers on the<br />

ends of dangling tube-like structures made up of numerous over-lapping bracts. We<br />

were not only amazed by its exotic blooms, but also by its continued flower production<br />

during the multiple 110 degree days of summer 2011. Like Bouganvillea it has a<br />

few spines and looks best if it has some sort of small support it can be tied to if needed.<br />

L. Gomphocarpus physocarpus (Hairy Balls) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 50” x 30” /<br />

Origin: Africa Family: Apocynaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#568<br />

LPB<br />

$5.97<br />

#645<br />

LPB<br />

Like a butterfly weed on steroids, Hairy Balls is a real stand out in the garden.<br />

It provides attractive white flowers tipped with lavender and has leaves that help<br />

feed the population of Monarch butterfly larvae. The plant gets its name however<br />

due to its large balloon-like, soft spiny lime-green testiculate seed pods.<br />

These are sometimes used in dried arrangements. Tolerant of heat and a bit of<br />

drought, Hairy Balls is definitely something different for the adventurous gardener.<br />

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A. Gomphrena ‘Fireworks’ (Fireworks Globe Amaranth)<br />

Annual / Sun / 40” x 40” /<br />

Origin: Central America Family: Amaranthaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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$5.97<br />

#358<br />

LPB<br />

We do not include many true annuals in our catalog but we were so impressed with<br />

Fireworks Globe Amaranth we had to add it. Introduced in 2009 by Burpee, this tall<br />

heat-tolerant continuous-flowering plant has been a big hit in variety trials all across<br />

the US and will end up being a popular plant seen in lots of gardens. Fireworks has<br />

strong stems with no wind problems and is constantly loaded with bloom clusters<br />

of hot pink, highlighted by sparks of yellow. It can even handle a little neglect and<br />

dryness once rooted into beds, borders and containers. What more could we ask?<br />

B. Goodenia viscida (Yellow Perennial Fanflower)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 18” x 30” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Western Australia Family: Goodeniaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#378<br />

LPB<br />

We were pleased to find this charming little Fanflower at a native plant nursery<br />

in Melbourne, Australia back in 2004. We were even more pleased, and<br />

surprised actually, that it proved winter-hardy in our Stillwater garden. From<br />

summer through fall this slowly spreading perennial sports dozens of small<br />

upright stems clothed in small leaves and attractive yellow fan-shaped flowers.<br />

It is native to the southwestern part of Western Australia where it is found<br />

growing in both sand and clay soils, usually in moist depressions. This easyto-grow<br />

plant is closely related to Scaevola, the popular Purple Fanflowers.<br />

C. Haloragis ‘Bronze’ (Bronze Sea Berry)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 12” x 24” /<br />

Origin: New Zealand Family: Haloragaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#253<br />

LPB<br />

A hardy perennial in zones 8 and south (zone 7 with protection), and a spectacular<br />

tender foliage plant in cooler areas, Bronze Sea Berry has a most unique color. Few<br />

plants can match the metallic-coppery colored leaves of this New Zealand native.<br />

We call it simply Bronze though you find similar, (or most likely the same) plant(s)<br />

with names like; ‘Melton Bronze’, ‘Wellington Bronze’, ‘Driftwood’ and ‘Wanganui<br />

Bronze’. The genus is sometimes spelled Halorages as well. Called Toatoa in<br />

its homeland, Bronze Sea Berry is superb when spilling over the edge of containers<br />

and contrasts brilliantly with charteuse-leaved plants. It does need ample moisture.<br />

D. Helianthus angustifolius (Narrow-leaf Sunflower)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 40” x 40” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: East and Southeast US Family: Asteraceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#173<br />

LPB<br />

Few plants are as attractive as Narrow-Leaf Sunflower when it is in full bloom.<br />

Hundreds of eye-popping golden daisies on tall stems flood the garden with<br />

color during October. Our friend Kevin Gragg tells us how neighbors walking<br />

by his yard in fall always want to know the name of this perennial. Native in<br />

Oklahoma, the eastern and southeastern US, a number of plants-people refer to it<br />

as one of the finest fall-flowering plants for the south. Although it is sometimes<br />

called Swamp Sunflower, it doesn’t need boggy conditions to thrive in the garden.<br />

E. Helichrysum italicum (Curry <strong>Plant</strong>)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Mediterranean Region Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#482<br />

LPB<br />

This silver foliage plant has the right texture, size and refined look to make any<br />

ordinary planting combination look spectacular. Similar in appearance to the herb<br />

Lavender, Curry <strong>Plant</strong> has nothing to do with the mix of spices used in Indian<br />

cooking and it’s not to be confused with Curry Leaf, (Muraya koenigii). Many<br />

people say the bruised foliage smells like the mix of spices know as curry but to<br />

me it smells more like pancakes and syrup. It is occasionally used to flavor dishes<br />

but usually not eaten and it contains essential oils which are used medicinally and<br />

therapeutically. The form of Curry <strong>Plant</strong> we offer is a secection with dense foliage<br />

and excellent silver color that sometimes will survive a zone 7 winter. This is an<br />

excellent designer foliage plant to combine with other foliage and flowering plants.<br />

F. Heliotropium amplexicaule (Hardy Heliotrope)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 12” x 2’-3’ / Zone 6-9<br />

Origin: Argentina Family: Boraginaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#159<br />

LPB<br />

Most of our hardy perennials come from North America, Europe or Asia. Hardy<br />

Heliotrope, however, is a choice ornamental native to Argentina in South<br />

America. It is a tough, drought-tolerant perennial that can survive in the rugged<br />

Southern Great Plains even if neglected. The flower-heads, with blooms<br />

of violet with yellow centers are dense at first then later loose, are known botanically<br />

as Scorpiod Cymes. Hardier than what I think many gardeners realize,<br />

it flowers spring into fall and works tremendously well as a groundcover.


G. Heteropterys glabra (Red Wing)<br />

Shrub/Vine / Sun / up to 12’ / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: Argentina Family: Malpighiaceae<br />

If the bright yellow flowers were the only color offering that Red Wing produced,<br />

it would still be considered an attractive plant. However, the showy blooms are<br />

followed by even showier fruit in the form of glowing red tri-winged samaras. Appearing<br />

for all the world like some sort of exotic Maple species, this semi-hardy<br />

shrub/vine from South America is in the Malpighiaceae, a family known for heattolerant<br />

plants. This plant is vine-like in part shade, more shrub-like in full sun.<br />

H. Hibiscus ‘Moy Grande’ (Moy Grande Hibiscus)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 5’ x 5’ / Zone 5-9<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Malvaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#202<br />

LPB<br />

Most people understand that “Muoy Grande” is Spanish for “very big “. However,<br />

Moy Grande is a hardy hibiscus cultivar with perhaps the largest flowers ever developed.<br />

It was bred by Dr. Ying Doon Moy at the San Antonio Botanical Garden, and<br />

sports enormous 12” diameter rose-pink blooms. This hardy perennial lights up the<br />

garden each day, summer through fall with an incredible amount of color. Hybridized<br />

from hibiscus species native to America (Hibiscus grandflorus x Hibiscus moscheutos<br />

‘Southern Belle’), Moy Grande is an easy to grow knockout for the garden.<br />

I. Hibiscus mutabilis ‘Rubrum’<br />

(Single Red Confederate Rose)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 72” x 60” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: China Family: Malvaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#171<br />

LPB<br />

For years I had envied gardeners in Central Texas when I’d see their flowering<br />

Confederate Roses, knowing it was too cold for them here in Stillwater, OK. But<br />

now, thanks to the generosity of Horticulturist Russell Studebaker, we have a reliably<br />

winter hardy form of this hibiscus in our garden. The selection Rubrum<br />

blooms summer to frost with beautiful single petaled flowers of soft rose pink<br />

to red. Although it is native to China, Confederate Rose gets its common name<br />

due to its extensive use in Southern gardens and confederate cemeteries following<br />

the Civil War. It has a little more upright growth habit than other hardy hibiscus<br />

but otherwise behaves the same. The word mutabilis means to mutate or<br />

change and refers to the way the flowers slightly change color as the day wears on.<br />

J. Huernia zebrina (Life Saver <strong>Plant</strong>) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 6” x 8” /<br />

Origin: Southern Africa Family: Apocynaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#373<br />

LPB<br />

We keep adding more and more unique heat tolerant succulents to our line-up of<br />

plants. The fleshy foliage of the little South African beauty may look prickly but it<br />

is actually quite user friendly with no spines. Anyone who sees it bloom is intrigued<br />

by its unusual zebra-patterned, star-shaped flowers with a raised ‘lifesaver’ in the<br />

center. It’s in the same group of plants as Carrion Flower (Stapelia gigantea), but<br />

doesn’t have the same aroma. Life Saver <strong>Plant</strong> is a small slow-growing plant that<br />

works best in a container that can be kept inside during winter and placed out in the hot<br />

baking sun in summer. As a succulent, it should be allowed to dry between watering.<br />

K. Incarvellia arguta (Himalayan Gloxinia)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: China, Nepal, India, Family: Bignoniaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#587<br />

SPB<br />

A rarely offered plant that we’ve injoyed the past few years in our flower beds<br />

and containers is Himalayan Gloxinia. It’s actually not a Gloxinia or even related<br />

to them. It is in the same family as the Trumpet Creepers. The pinkishlavender<br />

tube-like flowers that come and go all summer are a delight to hummingbirds,<br />

even though they sometimes fade to white during extreme heat.<br />

Himilayan Gloxinia also has attractive dark green and shiny pinnately compound<br />

leaves which are often reffered to as fern-like. It is hardy down to 15 degrees,<br />

so it might work well as a bring-into-the-garage-and-let-it-go-dormant plant.<br />

L. Indigofera kirilowii (Pink Chinese Indigo)<br />

Perennial/Shrub / Partial Shade to sun / 30” x spreading /<br />

Zone 6-10 Origin: China, Japan, Korea Family: Fabaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#543<br />

LPB<br />

$6.98<br />

#184<br />

LPB<br />

This little-known hardy perennial stops gardeners in their tracks when they see its<br />

rose-pink wisteria-like bloom clusters. Pink Chinese Indigo flowers late spring<br />

through summer with its 6” drooping racemes on 30” somewhat woody stems. In<br />

zones 7 and north, all growth begins below ground each season. Performing best<br />

in light shade, its attractive compound leaves scorch lightly in southern full sun.<br />

With its spreading nature, Pink Chinese Indigo works great as a taller groundcover.<br />

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A. Ipomoea carnea ssp. fistulosa<br />

(Pink Morning Glory Tree)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 72” x 40” /<br />

Origin: Mexico Family: Convolvulaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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$5.97<br />

#186<br />

LPB<br />

With a number of Ipomeas going by the name of Morning Glory Bush, we’ve<br />

named this tropical woody plant Morning Glory Tree. They do resemble<br />

small trees with their heights of 5 to 6 feet in a single season. The large pink<br />

saucer-shaped flowers are produced all summer into fall on these easy to<br />

grow plants. An excellent choice as a tender tropical for beds and containers<br />

in zones 7 and north as their seeds are produced too freely further south. I’ve<br />

grown them for years in our zone 6b Stillwater gardens and rarely see any seed.<br />

B. Ipomoea carnea ssp. fistulosa<br />

(White Morning Glory Tree)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 72” x 40” /<br />

Origin: Mexico Family: Convolvulaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#245<br />

LPB<br />

This is a tropical shrub that quickly gives the seasonal garden a tall flowering tree-like<br />

element. We’ve included Morning Glory Trees in the studio at Oklahoma Gardening<br />

since the late 90’s much to the delight of garden visitors. I was actually pictured with<br />

the white one on the cover of the brochure one year. With its crisp pure white flowers,<br />

this form produces more blooms than the pink form during the growing season. This<br />

is an easy to grow fun plant for the back of the mixed border or large patio containers.<br />

C. Ipomoea jaegeri (Kenya Shrub Morning Glory)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 18” x 40” /<br />

Origin: East Africa Family: Convolvulaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#546<br />

LPB<br />

We’re finally making available one of our choicest plants from Kenya. This tropical<br />

woody Ipomoea is clothed in willow-like leaves and produces stunning lavender-hued<br />

blooms all summer on the most interesting plant frame. The stems<br />

come up a short distance and then branch perfectly horizontal for a few feet and<br />

seem to hover a few inches from the ground while completely loaded with flowers.<br />

D. Ipomoea x imperialis ‘Sunrise Serenade’<br />

(Double Red Morning Glory)<br />

Tropical Vine / Sun / 15’ /<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Convolvulaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#129<br />

LPB<br />

This is probably the most appropriately named Morning Glory I know. Greeting<br />

each new dawn, are its double cherry-red and ruffled blooms that resemble gigantic<br />

Sweet Pea blossoms. We grew this unique climber at the Oklahoma Gardening studio<br />

for the first time in 2004, and visitors immediately wanted to know what it was.<br />

Sunrise Seranade is easy to grow like other Morning Glories but very unmorning<br />

glory-like with its spectacular flowers. Not a heavy seed producer, let it light up<br />

your trellis or arbor every morning with its huge and out-of-the-ordinary blooms.<br />

E. Iresine herbstii ‘Purple Lady’ (Purple Lady Iresine)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 6” x 40” /<br />

Origin: South America Family: Amaranthaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#491<br />

LPB<br />

If you want to use something different in place of purple leaved sweet potatoes,<br />

let me suggest Purple Lady Iresine. It is more elegant because of its smaller refined<br />

leaves and dense mat-like growth habit. This cascading plant’s foliage color<br />

has been described as dark burgundy or bright cranberry. With excellent resilience<br />

in hot weather, Purple Lady Iresine looks tremendous spilling out of containers<br />

or when providing a low splash of purple in front of beds and borders.<br />

It creates an especially impressive contrast with gold or silver foliage plants.<br />

F. Justicia Betonica (White Shrimp <strong>Plant</strong>)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Tropical Africa and Asia Family: Acanthaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#565<br />

LPB<br />

The reason we offer so many plants in the Acanthus Family is because they<br />

are such outstanding performers during hot summers. A most unique member<br />

of this group of plants is the White Shrimp <strong>Plant</strong>. It is constantly in flower<br />

with its tall candles or white towers of bracts with small lavender flowers peering<br />

out. It’s these little caches of nectar that draw in the hummingbirds. Many<br />

people comment on the interesting green net-like veins that really stand out on<br />

the white bracts. Also called Squirrel Tail and Paper Plume, White Shrimp<br />

<strong>Plant</strong> is heat tough, easy and something different for flower beds and containers.


G. Justicia brandegeana (Red Shrimp <strong>Plant</strong>)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Mexico Family: Acanthaceae<br />

<strong>Plant</strong>s in the Acanthus Family are terrific in their ability to flower continuously<br />

when the weather is really hot. An endless bevy of blossoms is just what you get<br />

when you plant this vibrant selection of Red Shrimp <strong>Plant</strong> in your beds and containers.<br />

Most of the color of its inflorescences comes from the bright red bracts<br />

which are stacked in pagoda-like fashion on the ends of the stems. The actual<br />

flowers extend from within the little bract towers and are tubular in shape with<br />

a large “lower lip” or “tongue”, kind of like an open mouth saying ahhh. Red<br />

Shrimp <strong>Plant</strong> is a real delight for hummingbirds and although it hails from a subtropical<br />

climate, it occasionally over-winters in our zone 6b Stillwater garden.<br />

H. Justicia fulvicoma (Mexican Plume)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Mexico Family: Acanthaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#492<br />

LPB<br />

So many tropical plants in the Acanthaceae make wonderful additions to temperate<br />

gardens because of their undaunted flowering in the heat of summer. The continuously<br />

abundant flowers of Mexican Plume are likewise s ummer-tough, bright and<br />

showy. We discovered this plant at a nursery in south Texas a while back and<br />

have been quite impressed with its festive flowers of orange, yellow and reddish<br />

tones. The hummingbirds and butterflies also enjoy its colorful blooms. Great in<br />

beds or containers, plant it in full sun or light shade for a fabulous summer show.<br />

I. Kalanchoe gastonis-bonnieri (Donkey’s Ears)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 18” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Madagascar Family: Crassulaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#170<br />

LPB<br />

A fun and exotic looking succulent that works well in outdoor containers and as a<br />

houseplant is Donkey’s Ears. And what huge ears they are. The big fleshy gray-green<br />

leaves grow up to 20 inches long and have splashes of beautiful dark-colored mottling.<br />

As a bonus the leaves produce small plantlets along their edges which are easily<br />

separated and potted up. It makes an awesome container specimen but does need<br />

to be kept on the dry side. If it ever blooms indoors in winter, be sure to pot up a few<br />

plantlets torn from its leaves because this is a signal that the mother plant will soon<br />

die. The botanical name honors French Botanist Dr. Gaston Bonnier (1853-1922).<br />

J. Kalanchoe hildebrantii (Silver Spoon Kalanchoe<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 18” x 18” / NEW<br />

Origin: Madagascar Family: Crassulaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#537<br />

LPB<br />

We got this Madagascar native a few years ago from the Cal State Fullerton Botanical<br />

Garden and absolutely love it. Its metallic silvery leaves are shaped like<br />

oval spoons. Best in a container, keep it on the dry side and outdoors in summer<br />

and bring it inside for the winter. Pinch its stem tips to promote bushiness<br />

and a thicker set of its striking silver leaves. Silver Spoon Kalanchoe<br />

looks terrific grouped with pots of other succulents and colorful foliage plants.<br />

K. Kalanchoe orgyalis (Copper Kalanchoe) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 12” x 12” /<br />

Origin: Madagascar Family: Crassulaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#560<br />

LPB<br />

$5.97<br />

#575<br />

LPB<br />

We always get lots of oohs and ahhs when we add this unique plant to our displays<br />

at home and garden shows. Copper Kalanchoe is a well-branched succulent with<br />

a most interesting leaf color. Its coppery hue comes from a covering of tiny cinnamon<br />

colored hairs that give it a somewhat felted look. After the leaves age, they become<br />

more silvery in color. Sometimes called Copper Spoons, put it in a container<br />

and grow it out in full sun during summer then bring it inside and treat it as a house<br />

plant in winter. This easy to grow plant looks dynamite in a light colored pot grown<br />

out in full summer sun. As a succulent, it should be kept a little on the dry side.<br />

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Lantana<br />

For Oklahoma and the surrounding region, it is<br />

hard to beat Lantana for its shear flower power<br />

during our hot summers. Amazing butterfly nectar<br />

plants, Lantanas are in the Family Verbenaceae<br />

(Verbena Family). Lantana is a genus of around<br />

150 species of shrubs, perennials and tender plants<br />

from North, Central and South America, with<br />

seven species also being native to South Africa.<br />

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There are six species indigenous to parts of the<br />

Southern United States. A lot of the early hybridization<br />

of Lantana took place in France, with<br />

most hybrids having a mix of two South American<br />

species; L. camara and L. montevidensis. Lantanas<br />

that over-winter in our area most often have<br />

the genetics of L. urticoides, (aka L. horrida) in<br />

their lineage. Lantanas make superb bedding and<br />

A. Lantana camara ‘Samantha’ (Samantha Lantana)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 18” x 30” /<br />

Origin: South America Family: Verbenaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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$5.13<br />

#206<br />

LPB<br />

Samantha is a fun in the sun plant that lights up the garden. Heat-tolerant and<br />

tough as other lantanas with the added bonus of golden variegation make it extra<br />

special. Samantha Lantana is also sterile, meaning flowers are non-stop since fruit<br />

isn’t produced. This is an excellent and easy plant for beds and patio containers.<br />

B. Lantana ‘Carnival’ (Carnival Perennial Lantana)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 40” x 90” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: Hybrid - N America, S America Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#534<br />

LPB<br />

Our friend and former Oklahoma Gardening show host, Ray Campbell shared this<br />

reliably perennial Lantana with us after growing it for number of years in his Stillwater<br />

garden. Carnival Lantana lives up to its name. Its flowers are definitely not<br />

subtle, with their festive mixture of yellow, pink and lavender. You see the different<br />

colors as each individual flower changes as it ages. Since new buds continue to open<br />

in the center of the cluster, you always have this lively mix. As with all perennial<br />

Lantanas, cut it back hard before growth begins in spring to keep it tidy and compact.<br />

C. Lantana ‘Dallas Red’ (Dallas Red Lantana)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24”x 36” /<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$5.13<br />

#411<br />

LPB<br />

If you take a close look at a flower cluster of Lantana, you’ll notice that the individual<br />

blooms open from the center outward and gradually change color as<br />

they age. Dallas Red Lantana’s flowers actually open orange but then quickly<br />

change to brilliant red. This compact-growing, butterfly-attracting selection<br />

is the reddest Lantana available. It sometimes goes by the names, Texas<br />

Flame and New Red. Dallas Red Lantana is listed winter hardy to zone 8 so it<br />

may over-winter in our area during years when it doesn’t get extremely cold.<br />

D. Lantana ‘Greg Grant’ (Greg Grant Variegated Lantana)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24” x 30” /<br />

Origin: Hybrid - South America Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$5.13<br />

#156<br />

LPB<br />

This is a tremendous plant for Southern gardens, discovered by and named for<br />

our friend, Texas plantsman Greg Grant. Greg found this variegated sport<br />

on the old fashioned cultivar ‘Flava’, growing in a church yard in New Braunfels,<br />

Texas. Lantanas are winning plants to begin with but this one is extra<br />

choice because the pink and yellow flowers are made more festive with the<br />

yellow marbling and patches on the leaves. As with all variegated plants,<br />

keep any all-green portions pruned out. We propagate only from the best<br />

variegated plant portions to ensure the most colorful specimens possible.<br />

E. Lantana montevidensis (Lavender Trailing Lantana)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 12”x 40” / NEW<br />

Origin: South America Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$5.13<br />

#585<br />

LPB<br />

Dependable heat-tolerant lavender-colored blooms on an elegant cascading plant. It is<br />

outstanding for use in large mixed containers for spilling over the sides. The fact that it is<br />

sterile and no fruit/seed produced ensures that it blooms its head off in the garden. Butterflies<br />

will greatly appreciate you for adding Lavender trailing Lantana to your garden.<br />

G. Lantana montevidensis ‘Nairobi Blush’<br />

(‘Nairobi Blush’ Trailing Lantana)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 12” x 36” /<br />

Origin: South America Family: Verbenaceae<br />

container plants because their small 5-lobed flowers<br />

grouped in domed terminal clusters are continually<br />

produced all growing season. They like it hot<br />

and bright and will flower best in these conditions.<br />

$5.13<br />

#489<br />

LPB<br />

Most of the trailing lantanas you come across have flowers that are either white or<br />

lavender. So you can imagine how interested I was when I spotted this form at a<br />

nursery in Nairobi, Kenya in 2009. Its blooms are pale pinkish-lavender, sort of a


hue halfway between white and lavender. This species is native to South America<br />

and actually named after the city Montevideo in Uruguay. What we found in Kenya<br />

may be an unnamed selection from a sport that arose somewhere in Africa or Europe,<br />

or an old cultivar whose name has long been lost. We will continue to refer to<br />

it as Nairobi Blush unless we learn otherwise. Whatever it’s past, it gives gardeners<br />

another great color to use for spilling out of large containers or planters.<br />

H. Lantana urticoides ‘Palo Pinto’<br />

(Texas Perennial Lantana)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 30” x 48” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: Southern US, Mexico Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#284<br />

LPB<br />

The lively and festive flowers of this rugged heat loving plant are superbly effective<br />

at drawing in multitudes of butterflies. Called Texas Lantana in this<br />

part of the world, it is also known as West Indian Shrub Verbena and occurs<br />

over large portions of the Southern US and Mexico. The leaves of Texas Lantana<br />

are smaller than Lantana camara, rougher and slightly crinkly. This selection<br />

was collected in Palo Pinto County Texas, near Possum Kingdom Lake by<br />

plantsman Paul Dowlearn of Wichita Falls. It sports vibrant colored blooms and<br />

a growth habit of greater width than height. Gardeners further south of us can<br />

keep its size in check by cutting it back hard in spring before growth begins.<br />

I. Lantana ‘Zinn Orange’<br />

(Zinn Orange Perennial Lantana)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 40” x 60” / Zone 6-10 Origin: Hybrid - North<br />

and South American Species Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#569<br />

LPB<br />

Lantanas that are reliably winter hardy are some of the best perennials for gardens<br />

in this area. Their bright-colored flower clusters, long season of bloom and attractiveness<br />

to butterflies make them highly desirable. The selection Zinn Orange<br />

was named by Oklahoma plantsman Bill Farris for the Zinn family whose garden<br />

it had been growing in for a few decades in northern Oklahoma City. They had<br />

originally purchased the plant as an unnamed orange Lantana nearby from the once<br />

fabulous but now gone Satterlee’s Nursery that used to reside on May Avenue.<br />

We are always excited to grow durable worthy plants that have proven themselves<br />

here for this many years, especially if they have a bit of local history like this one.<br />

J. Laurentia fluviatilis (Blue Star Creeper)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Shade / 3” x 18” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: New South Wales - Australia Family: Campanulaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#111<br />

LPB<br />

Blue Star Creeper is one of the few Australian plants winter-hardy in our zone<br />

6b, Stillwater garden. A carpeting plant that is an excellent low-growing ground<br />

cover, it has a fine texture with its tiny leaves. We used this ground-hugger as<br />

a substitute for moss in a Japanese Garden I created at the Oklahoma Gardening<br />

studio. This little perennial is completely smothered with small paleblue<br />

star-shaped flowers in the spring. It can be used between stepping stones<br />

but does not handle foot traffic. Blue Star Creeper performs best in full sun<br />

with adequate moisture in a soil amended with organic matter, like compost.<br />

K. Lawsonia inermis (Henna)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 30” x 30” /<br />

Origin: North Africa, Southwest Asia Family: Lythraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#265<br />

LPB<br />

Growing Henna somewhere in your garden will give you ample conversation material<br />

for garden club tours and the like. It will also fill the air with its delicious<br />

fragrance. Mentioned in the Song of Soloman (as Camphire), Henna has been used<br />

in perfumes since around 1500 BC and is currently grown commercially in several<br />

African Countries, India, Pakistan and Iran. Henna is also well-known for the dye<br />

its leaves produce, used for coloring hair, darkening fingernails and temporary body<br />

art which can stay in the skin for a month or more. It is approved for use as a hair<br />

dye. This desert oasis plant tolerates extreme heat and drought and grows as a shrub<br />

or small tree, reaching up to 20’ where hardy. The flowers, describes as the most<br />

fragrant on earth, are white with pink tones, and produced throughout the summer.<br />

L. Leonotis leonurus (Lion’s Ears)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 3’ x 3’ / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: South and East Africa Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#167<br />

LPB<br />

This showy plant’s botanical name says it all. Leon from the Greek means Lion<br />

and Otis means ear. It’s easy to see how the name came about as its individual<br />

blooms resemble the fuzzy ears of a lion. A shrubby member of the Mint family, it<br />

usually blooms a little when planted out in spring, but really comes on in late summer<br />

and fall. The whorled clusters of bright orange flowers make quite a glowing<br />

display in the autumn garden. It is listed hardy to zone 8, although we’ve had it<br />

survive several years in our zone 6b garden in Stillwater. Known as Wild Dagga<br />

in Kenya, it is found growing in the Great Rift Valley and a few other districts.<br />

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A. Leucanthemum x superbum (Heirloom)<br />

(Heirloom Shasta Daisy) NEW<br />

Perennial / Sun / 24” x 36” / Zone 4-10<br />

Origin: Europe Family: Asteraceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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#524<br />

LPB<br />

This Shasta Daisy comes to us from our friend Kit Donavan, a plant her mother Kae<br />

Ottis has grown in Okarche, OK since the early 1950’s. Kit tells us that at bloom<br />

time, her mother would fill the entire house with milk glass vases stuffed with their<br />

cheerful white and yellow flowers. The Shasta Daisy originated as a hybrid plant (L.<br />

lacustre x L. maximum) produced by Horticulturist Luther Burbank and named for<br />

California’s Mount Shasta. Since its creation there have been numerous cultivars and<br />

selections made, many now with forgotten names. Some do well here in Oklahoma<br />

but many struggle, this one is obviously a winner. We love introducing new unheard<br />

of plants that perform well here but there will also always be a place for these heirloom<br />

tried and true plants that have proven to be Oklahoma tough for so many years.<br />

B. Liatris aspera (Rough Blazing Star)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 24-36” x 18” / Zones 3-9<br />

Origin: Central and Eastern US, Canada Family: Asteraceae<br />

$4.11<br />

#204<br />

SPB<br />

Rough Blazing Star is another beautiful member of the Daisy Family, even without<br />

rayflorets, (“petals”). This native perennial’s flower stems have a thickened appearance<br />

due to the “Buttons” or “Little Cabbages”, of pastel purple flower clusters lining<br />

them. Attractive before the summer and fall flowers with its narrow leaves, Rough<br />

Blazing Star also makes a nice cutflower as lots of blooms are open at the same time.<br />

First collected on the Lewis and Clark expedition in 1804, give it a dry and poor soil.<br />

C. Liatris elegans (Elegant Blazing Star)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 12” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: OK, Southeast US Family: Asteraceae<br />

$4.11<br />

#136<br />

SPB<br />

From mid-summer into fall, these native perennials light up the garden with their<br />

flowering spike-like racemes, or wands of soft purple suffused with white. You get a<br />

unique pastel bicolor effect from its blooms as its disk flowers, with wider petals than<br />

most Liatris, have white stamens protruding from the centers. Elegant Blazing Star<br />

is native from South Carolina to Oklahoma and areas south though it is somewhat<br />

rarely encountered. Sometimes referred to as Pinkscale Blazing Star, our plants are<br />

selected from the north-most extent of its range giving them added cold hardiness.<br />

D. Liatris punctata (Dotted Blazing Star)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 18” x 18” / Zone 3-9<br />

Origin: Central US, Canada Family: Asteraceae<br />

$4.11<br />

#128<br />

SPB<br />

From the central plains states and southern Canada, Dotted Blazing Star is the most<br />

western occurring Liatris, extending all the way to Arizona. For this reason, it does<br />

best when given a soil poor in nutrients, quick to drain and kept on the dry side.<br />

Too rich a soil will cause the stems to lie flat on the ground twisted and curled. This<br />

short-statured perennial grows from a bulb-like corm and sends deep taproots far<br />

down into the soil profile. Dotted Blazing Star gets its name from the numerous gland<br />

dots, or punctations, on its leaves. If you need a super tough plant for xeric plantings<br />

and butterfly gardens, this purple blooming perennial is just the right choice.<br />

E. Lilium formosanum (Formosa Lily)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 60” x 12” / Zone 5-10<br />

Origin: Taiwan Family: Liliaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#139<br />

LPB<br />

This elegant Lily would be more widely grown if everyone knew how hardy it<br />

was. Readily surviving our zone 6b winters for years, it is also hardy in the zone<br />

5 gardens of Kansas City. Interestingly it is native to tropical Taiwan, so it stands<br />

up to the heat of Southern summers where most Liliums fail. Tall and impressive,<br />

Formosa Lily sports huge white and fragrant trumpets during July and August<br />

when little is blooming in the garden. After flowering, the interesting seed<br />

pods provide a nice candelabra effect in the garden. Grow this easy plant in your<br />

garden and aid in its survival as it is becoming scarce in its home land of Taiwan.<br />

F. Malvaviscus arboreus var. drummondii (Turk’s Cap)<br />

Perennial / Sun, Partial Shade, Shade / 48” x 48” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: Southern US to South America Family: Malvaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#225<br />

LPB<br />

Related to Hibiscus, this versatile plant grows well in full sun or full shade. It behaves<br />

as a shrub in zones 8 and warmer, but here in our zone 6b Stillwater garden,<br />

Turk’s Cap is a wonderful red-flowering perennial. The leaves of this plant look<br />

different whether it is in sun or shade. In shade they lie flat, while bright sunshine<br />

gives them a nice crinkly textured appearance. Heat and drought tolerant once established,<br />

Turk’s Cap is relished by hummingbirds and should be planted much more.


G. Malvaviscus arboreus var. drummondii ‘Alba’<br />

(White Turk’s Cap)<br />

Perennial / Sun, Partial Shade, Shade / 48” x 48” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: S US to S America Family: Malvaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#495<br />

LPB<br />

The red and pink varieties of Turk’s Cap have performed so wonderfully well in<br />

our garden that you can imagine how excited we were to add yet another color of<br />

this terrific and versatile plant. This gleaming white form holds the same qualities<br />

of attractiveness and stellar performance as its warmer hued counterparts. An<br />

outstanding combination is created when the white and red varieties of Turk’s Cap<br />

are planted together. The small edible fruit these plants produce is enjoyed by a<br />

number of species of birds. We consider them perennials in our garden though they<br />

are actually die-back shrubs or what some gardeners refer to as woody perennials.<br />

H. Malvaviscus ‘Pam Puryear’ (Pink Turk’s Cap)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 48” x 48” / Zone 6b-10<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Malvaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#366<br />

LPB<br />

Yet another outstanding plant introduced by our friend, Texas <strong>Plant</strong>sman Greg Grant.<br />

This beautiful peachy pink Turk’s Cap was created by crossing the red M. arboreus<br />

var. drummondi with a pink form of M. arboreus. The result is a fabulous new woody<br />

stemmed perennial for zones 6b and 7, and a terrific flowering shrub for zones 8 and<br />

south. Greg named his new creation for the late Pam Puryear of Navasota, Texas. She<br />

was one of the original Texas Rose Rustlers and is credited for finding and preserving<br />

many antique roses. This new and novel colored plant is winter hardy in our Stillwater<br />

garden where it gets its share of hummingbird action in both full sun and shade.<br />

I. Manettia cordifolia (Red Firecracker Vine)<br />

Perennial vine / Sun / up to 10’ / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: South America Family: Rubiaceae<br />

$8.96<br />

#559<br />

LPB<br />

A plant that I’m sure will greatly rise in popularity in our area over the coming<br />

years is Red Firecracker Vine. This little South American vine has survived<br />

several cold winters in our garden while proving to be quite a desirable<br />

plant. It flowers for several weeks from late summer through fall with its glowing<br />

bright red-orange tubular blooms that the hummingbirds absolutely love. An<br />

attractive and well-behaved vine with small leaves, it will fit well into any garden.<br />

Be sure to order early as this rarely offered gem will sell out pretty quick.<br />

J. Manfreda virginica (Woodland Agave)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 12” x 12” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: East & Southeast US, Mexico Family: Agavaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#320<br />

LPB<br />

There aren’t a lot of plants that can tolerate both shade and drought, making woodland<br />

agave a valuable choice for those areas of the landscape. The interesting<br />

leaves are another great reason to grow this native perennial succulent. It forms a<br />

low clump of sword-shaped, but not overly sharp, rosette of green leaves and depending<br />

on its genetics, beautiful redish purple spots or blotches. Its flowers are not<br />

showy but unique. They form on a stalk that rises four to six feet above the leaves<br />

and are a greenish yellow to brownish color. Hummingbirds are attracted to these<br />

blooms that have a heavy fragrance that has been compared to that of Tuberose to<br />

which it is closely related. Woodland Agave is drought tolerant but appreciates<br />

supplemental moisture during dry times and can handle regular moderate irrigation.<br />

K. Manihot esculenta ‘Variegata’ (Variegated Tapioca)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 40” x 40” /<br />

Origin: Brazil Family: Euphorbiaceae<br />

A highly coveted plant that we are always quick to sell out of, Variegated Tapioca<br />

seems to be an instant favorite to all who discover it. This tropical has electrifying<br />

foliage with large palmately divided leaves streaked green and creamy yellowish<br />

with glowing deep red petioles. It is definitely one of the most attractive of all<br />

variegated plants. It grows exceptionally well in hot steamy summers, performing<br />

great in full sun or light shade. Variegated Tapioca is best grown as an ornamental<br />

rather than attempting to prepare anything edible from its poisonous plant parts.<br />

L. Marshallia caespitosa (Barbara’s Buttons)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 16” x 16” / Zone 5-10<br />

Origin: Central, South and SE US Family: Asteraceae<br />

$11.88<br />

#241<br />

GAL<br />

$6.98<br />

#102<br />

LPB<br />

Native plant experts everywhere agree that Barbara’s Buttons is an exceptional and<br />

garden worthy perennial. It is a very tidy and refined native plant that fits well in<br />

the front of the border or in a rock garden. In mid spring it sends up white Scabios<br />

a-like flower heads atop 12-18” stalks from a rosette of attractive strap-like leaves.<br />

The “buttons” are daisies without rayflorets, or petals, instead consisting of unique<br />

frilly disk florets that are very showy. Sweetly fragrant, the blooms work well as<br />

cutflowers, are relished by butterflies, and when seed is formed, provide food for<br />

finches and other small birds. This is a pretty but tough plant, tolerant of a wide<br />

range of soil types and moisture regimes, growing well in full sun or partial shade.<br />

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C D<br />

A. Maurandya antirrhiniflora ‘Joan Lorraine’<br />

(Climbing Snapdragon)<br />

Tropical Vine / Sun / 10’ /<br />

Origin: Southwest US Family: Scrophulariaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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$5.97<br />

#120<br />

LPB<br />

The thing I like most about this climbing member of the snapdragon family is<br />

its continuous production of deep amethyst blooms. Undaunted by hot weather,<br />

it flowers all summer right up to the first freeze of autumn. Easily reaching<br />

8 feet in a single season, its small delicate leaves will also lend a distinct texture<br />

to the garden. Joan Lorraine is an especially floriferous purple cultivar.<br />

B. Melinis nerviglumis ‘Savannah’ (Ruby Grass)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 10” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Madagascar and Sub-Sharan Africa Family: Roaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#415<br />

LPB<br />

A heat tolerant grass with bluish-silvery leaves and pink fluffy plumes is what<br />

you get when you plant Ruby Grass. Nurserymen and horticulturist of our state<br />

were so impressed with this gorgeous graminoid that they named it a 2011 Oklahoma<br />

Proven Selection. It starts blooming once the weather begins to get hot,<br />

usually around early July. Ruby Grass looks great when used as a single specimen,<br />

planted in masses, and it makes a dynamite display in a container. This awesome<br />

little grass is also sometimes used as a cut flower and in dried arrangements.<br />

C. Miscanthus sinensis ‘Morning Light’<br />

(Morning Light Maiden Grass) NEW<br />

Perennial Grass / Sun / 50” x 36” / Zone 5-10<br />

Origin: East Asia Family: Poaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#588<br />

LPB<br />

Morning Light is probably the most elegant and refined of all ornamental grasses.<br />

Its graceful narrow leaves are green with white margins giving the plant a<br />

silvery cast. This hardy grass works great as an accent plant for beds and borders<br />

and it can also be used in large containers. Being shorter than most other<br />

Miscanthus grasses lends its use in smaller gardens. At seasons end, leave<br />

its foliage through winter then cut it back to around 12” in early March. Established<br />

clumps can also be divided for more plants after a few years.<br />

D. Myrtus communis ‘Compacta Variegata’<br />

(Variegated Myrtle) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Southern Europe Family: Myrtaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#657<br />

LPB<br />

Myrtle is an ancient herb featured heavily in myth and ritual. It is symbolic<br />

of love and immortality and customarily included in the bouquets of<br />

European weddings. Myrtle is also often trained into hedges and topiaries<br />

in Mediterranean gardens, where the air is filled with their spicy fragrance<br />

when they are trimmed. This variegated compact form is easy to grow,<br />

heat tolerant and adds a delicate soft textured affect to mixed plantings. It actually<br />

survives the winter here in Stillwater if grown in a protected location.<br />

E. Nierembergia linariifolia ‘Taza Grande’<br />

(Taza Grande Cup Flower) NEW<br />

Perennial / Sun / 18” x 24” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Argentina Family: Solanaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#656<br />

LPB<br />

Most gardeners are probably familiar with Nierembergia, or Cupflower. However,<br />

they are probably not aware of the difference in species. In the US, cultivars of the<br />

more common N. scoparia, such as ‘Mont Blanc’ and ‘Purple Robe’ dominate the<br />

Cupflower scene, but gardens are missing out if they haven’t tried N. linariifolia. It<br />

is a lesser grown species with a little more cold hardiness and larger flowers. The<br />

<strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong> exclusive introduction ‘Taza Grande’ is a selection we made<br />

that has substantially larger flowers. It was the largest blooming individual out of a<br />

batch of seedlings from our friend Rolando Uria of Buenos Aires, Argentina. Its Petunia-sized<br />

blooms are white with a touch of lavender and yellow in the center and<br />

freely produced throughout the heat of summer continuing even after a few frosts.<br />

F. Orthosiphon labiatus (Shell Bush) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: South Africa Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#418<br />

LPB<br />

We picked this plant at a Houston nursery a few years ago under the name of Pink<br />

Surprise plant. Indeed it was surprising to see how well it performed the last two summers<br />

with its continuous production of beautiful mauve pink blooms no matter how<br />

hot the weather. With thorough research we learned Shell Bush’s true identity and<br />

homeland of Southern Africa. A very new and novel plant to this part of the world, it<br />

grows incredibly well here in beds or containers and is also a big hit with the butterflies.


G. Orthosiphon stamineus (White Cat’s Whiskers)<br />

Tripical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: SE Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

Cat’s Whickers is a plant we used to include in the displays and various theme<br />

gardens years ago when I was Studio Garden Manager with Oklahoma Gardening.<br />

Its showy tall spikes of prestine white flowers with long stamens were always<br />

enjoyed and commented on by garden visitors. Misai Kucing (Cat’s Whiskers in<br />

Malay), is used in Southeast Asia to make Java Tea, which is taken to dissolve<br />

kidney stones. There are several reasons we like growing this exotic looking<br />

member of the Mint Family. It is easy, dependable, continuous-flowering and it<br />

attracts scores of butterflies. Use it in beds and borders or in patio containers.<br />

H. Orthosiphon stamineus ‘Lavender’<br />

(Lavender Cat’s Whiskers) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 12” x 24” /<br />

Origin: SE Asia Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#535<br />

LPB<br />

This easy East Asian member of the Mint Family provides the garden with lots<br />

of its exotic looking blooms during the hot summer months. Many gardeners<br />

who have grown the white variety of this plant are thrilled to discover this<br />

more uncommon Lavender form. The two make excellent companions and a<br />

nice display when planted together. <strong>Plant</strong>s with animal names are always fun<br />

for children’s gardens and the butterflies that Cat’s Whiskers attract make them<br />

even more valuable for such use. They perform great in containers as well.<br />

I. Passiflora caerulea (Hardy Blue Passion Flower)<br />

Hardy Vine / Sun to Partial Shade / 25’ / Zone 6-9<br />

Origin: South America Family: Passifloraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#648<br />

LPB<br />

The white and blue exotic looking blooms on this hardy vine are nothing short<br />

of stunning. It flowers from summer through fall and brings multitudes of large<br />

orange fritillary butterflies to the garden, as its foliage is a food source for their<br />

larvae. A bit rambunctious for the small garden, it’s best suited for a support in<br />

a lawn where any emerging suckers can be easily removed. Hardy Blue Passion<br />

Vine is easy to grow, blooming best in full sun with ample water to keep<br />

the flowers coming. Our plant resprouts from the roots each spring and extends<br />

15’ or more covering a rustic cedar arbor here at <strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong>.<br />

J. Passiflora ‘Inspiration’ (Inspiration Passion Vine)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / up to 15’ /<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Passifloraceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#158<br />

LPB<br />

We originally planted Inspiration Passion vine expecting it to die off over winter<br />

but were completely surprised to see it return in spring. We were first impressed<br />

with this wonderful vine after seeing it bloom at the Oklahoma Gardening Studio<br />

Gardens. This hybrid constantly produces enormous dark purple fragrant blooms<br />

that delight all who visit our garden. Remember, any orange-striped prickly (but<br />

soft) caterpillars you see eating the leaves will turn into beautiful orange butterflies.<br />

K. Passiflora x alatocaerulea (Hybrid Passion Flower)<br />

Tropical Vine / Sun / 6-10’ /<br />

Origin: Hybrid - South America Family: Passifloraceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#544<br />

LPB<br />

This hybrid of two South American passion vine species is outstanding for a trellis<br />

placed in a large patio container or a smaller support in a seasonal bed. The huge<br />

(4”-5”) fragrant blooms sport sepals that alternate white and pinkish violet, and<br />

have double-ranked purple filaments in the center. As an interspecific hybrid, its<br />

flowers are sterile with no fruit or seed produced, enabling it to continue blooming<br />

freely throughout the season. It grows best in full sun in an organically amended<br />

soil with ample moisture. This vine is sometimes listed at the cultivar ‘Pfordtii’.<br />

L. Pavonia missionum (Orange-Scarlet Mallow) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 20” x 20” /<br />

Origin: ME Argentina, S Brazil, Paraguay Family: Malvaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#162<br />

LPB<br />

$5.97<br />

#553<br />

LPB<br />

A rare plant that gardeners usually get to see only in botanical gardens is this brilliant<br />

little South American Mallow. Its flower color is unlike anything we’ve seen in the<br />

Hibiscus Family. Painted much like a sunset, each bloom is a glowing red-orange<br />

with a golden center. Although it is not winter hardy here, it will reseed a bit, as you<br />

would expect from a Pavonia. We recently picked up this butterfly nectar plant at<br />

a botanical garden plant sale in Southern California. Its botanical name alludes to<br />

the Misiones Province in Northeast Argentina, one of the areas where it grows wild.<br />

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Pentas<br />

The genus Pentas belongs to the plant family Rubiaceae<br />

and contains around 40 or so species native to<br />

tropical parts of Africa and Arabia. They are called<br />

Pentas because of their number of petals. Just like<br />

a pentagon has 5 sides, a Pentas flower is made up<br />

of 5 petals. Individual flowers are small but they<br />

are packed into round flat-topped clusters known<br />

as corymbs. These clusters of bright and colorful<br />

flowers not only make them excellent garden ornamentals<br />

but great butterfly and hummingbird plants<br />

as well. A butterfly can sit atop a cluster and sample<br />

A B<br />

A. Pedilanthus tithymaloides ‘Splish Splash’<br />

(Marbled Jacob’s Ladder)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Tropical America Family: Euphorbiaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

C<br />

$5.97<br />

#549<br />

LPB<br />

This new arrival into the US from Thailand is a real show-stopper when grown<br />

in patio containers. Quite a change from the traditional variegated Jacob’s Ladder,<br />

the cultivar Splish Splash has zig zag stems that are mostly white splashed<br />

with green. Also known as Devil’s Backbone, Jacob’s Ladder plants are succulents<br />

that can be brought inside during the winter and treated like houseplants.<br />

Just be sure to not over water them when grown indoors. The plant<br />

will sometimes take on pink tones in the leaves and stems during cool weather.<br />

B. Pennisetum ‘Princess Caroline’<br />

(Princess Caroline Fountain Grass) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 30” x 36” /<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Poaceae<br />

There has been a lot of breeding and selecting going on with Purple Fountain Grasses<br />

during the last few years. The most exciting break through is from the breeding<br />

program of Dr. Wayne Hannah of the University of Georgia with his amazing new<br />

Princess Caroline. Named for one of his granddaughters, this stunning selection<br />

has extra wide leaf blades colored dark purple to nearly black. The leaves arch<br />

nicely forming attractive ribbony mounds that somewhat resemble purple phormiums<br />

which are hard to grow here. Princess Caroline Purple Fountain Grass is an<br />

excellent ornamental grass for Oklahoma because of its durability, heat tolerance<br />

and strong color display.<br />

nectar from numerous individual flowers, as can a<br />

hummingbird while hovering. The starry 5-petalled<br />

flowers also give rise to one of its common names,<br />

Egyptian Star Flower.<br />

Pentas are wonderful in Oklahoma gardens because<br />

of their ability to flower in hot weather. They look<br />

good planted in masses of a single color or of mixed<br />

colors and also work well in containers, either singly<br />

or combined with other plants. Keep them dead<br />

headed for the best flower display. Pentas can also<br />

be brought inside for winter and treated as house-<br />

D E<br />

C. Penstemon digitalis (Smooth Penstemon)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 30” x 24” / Zone 3-10<br />

Origin: Eastern North America Family: Scrophulariaceae<br />

$10.86<br />

#652<br />

GAL<br />

$6.98<br />

#215<br />

LPB<br />

This native perennial is the species of Penstemon that Dale Lindgren of Nebraska<br />

developed the cultivar ‘Husker Red’ from, which was later selected as the perennial<br />

plant of the year in 1996. It blooms April to June with large inflated white flowers<br />

and has smooth green leaves and stems. The word digitalis means foxglove-like<br />

and aptly describes the attractive flower stalks of this plant. Smooth Penstemon is<br />

more tolerant of moisture and enriched soil than most of the more western species.<br />

It is a stately perennial and one of the more long-lived species of the Penstemons.<br />

D. Pentas bussei (Busse’s Pentas) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Partial Shade to Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: East Africa Family: Rubiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#643<br />

LPB<br />

We found this especially showy form of Pentas Bussei during our plant hunting trip<br />

to Kenya in 2009. It was growing near the Shimba Hills in the southwestern part<br />

of the country. The intense reddish pink flower clusters of this under story species<br />

really light up shaded beds and containers while attracting scores of butterflies and<br />

hummingbirds to the garden. It was named for German Agricultural Botanist Walter<br />

Busse who first discovered it in Tanzania in 1903. Busse’s Pentas will bloom<br />

best with a bit of morning sun and a small amount of pinching to keep it bushy.<br />

E. Pentas lanceolata ‘Compact Lavender’<br />

(Lavender Pentas)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 12” x 12” /<br />

Origin: East Africa Family: Rubiaceae<br />

plants if kept warm and given plenty of light.<br />

Here in the US, hybrids of the species Pentas lanceolata<br />

are about the only thing available but there are<br />

other species with garden merit that we occasionally<br />

offer here at the nursery. A big mistake I often see or<br />

hear, is people calling one plant a “Penta”, or spelling<br />

it as such in garden literature. The word always<br />

has an “s” on the end, even if you are referring to<br />

only a single plant. It is one Pentas.<br />

$5.97<br />

#486<br />

LPB<br />

Lavender Pentas is one of my favorites because its flowers are a truly different<br />

color than any pentas I’ve ever seen. It is an older selection we used in designs<br />

back when I was with Oklahoma Gardening in the late 1990’s. This pentas is<br />

sometimes listed under the names, Dwarf Lavender, Compact Lavender or California<br />

Lavender. It does have a short compact habit with huge flower clusters yet<br />

you seldom see it offered. Our offering of this old variety has blooms that are<br />

still a more bluish color than the newer lavender-colored varieties available today.


G. Pentas lanceolata ‘Stars and Stripes’<br />

(Stars and Stripes Pentas)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24”x24” /<br />

Origin: Tropical Africa Family: Rubiaceae<br />

It’s hard to beat Stars and Stripes Pentas when it comes to sheer color impact<br />

in the garden. The contrast of its bright red flower clusters with its green and<br />

white foliage is very striking. Discovered by Texas plantsman Greg Grant, this<br />

heat tolerant tropical is always in flower. Both hummingbirds and butterflies<br />

are constantly visiting this pentas’ dramatic flowers. Beautiful in containers and<br />

flower beds, this is an instant impact plant that always gets noticed in the garden.<br />

H. Phlox paniculata (Pink Summer Phlox)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 36” x 40” / Zone 4-9<br />

Origin: Garden Origin Family: Polemoniaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#220<br />

LPB<br />

Back in the mid 1990’s when I was Garden Manager for the Oklahoma Gardening<br />

Studio grounds, I asked our volunteers if they had any noteworthy plants to include<br />

in one of our theme gardens. Ann Berry brought us this pink phlox that she had<br />

been growing for a number of years and we fell in love with it. This perennial<br />

has huge fragrant flower clusters of pale pink at the top of sturdy 2-3’ stems. It is<br />

tough, long-blooming and has great mildew resistance. We started offering it in the<br />

catalog because it had been so popular at our fall on-site sales the last several years.<br />

I. Phlox x ‘Wanda’ (Wanda Hybrid Phlox)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x36” / Zone 5-10<br />

Origin: Garden Origin Family: Polemoniaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

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LPB<br />

A terrific new perennial was created when plant breeders took a low mounding<br />

phlox species and crossed it with a taller species with large flowers. Wanda<br />

is a fuchsia colored hybrid with the best of both plant and bloom sizes and appears<br />

to be a whole new category of garden phlox. We received our start of this<br />

beauty from herbaceous plant genius Allen Armitage of the University of Georgia<br />

where it has received high marks in their trial gardens. It seems that another<br />

trait brought on by the hybridization is ceaseless flower production spring to frost.<br />

J. Plazia argentea (Plazia)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 30” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Argentina Family: Asteraceae<br />

$7.47<br />

#288<br />

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We first saw Plazia growing in the JC Raulston Arboretum in Raleigh, NC a<br />

few years ago and knew it was a plant we had to have. Its very silver and narrow<br />

leaves make you think it is a grass but it is actually a member of the Daisy<br />

family. You even get a few lavender-colored daisies during the warm<br />

months. A native of Argentina, it was introduced into the US by South Carolina<br />

plantsman Bob McCartney. Plazia is sometimes listed in the genus Hyalis<br />

and has local common names of Blanquilla and Olivillo. A beautiful and<br />

bold silver foliage plant, it works great as a “thriller” for a mixed container.<br />

K. Podranea ricasoliana (Port St. Johns Creeper)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 4’ x 3’ /<br />

Origin: South Africa Family: Bignoniaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#556<br />

LPB<br />

Port St. John’s Creeper is a remarkable tender sub-tropical shrub in the Bignoniaceae,<br />

or Trumpet Creeper family. Its impressive clusters of huge soft pink flowers<br />

appear in late summer and dazzle the garden throughout autumn. With as much<br />

color as a crapemyrtle when in full flower, this scandant shrub is one of the most<br />

asked about plants in our collection during September and October. Found in the<br />

wild at the mouth of the Mzimvube River at Port St. Johns, South Africa, it is grown<br />

as an ornamental in Mediterranean climates worldwide. Even as a tender shrub,<br />

gardeners who grow it say it is well worth planting for its fabulous fall display.<br />

L. Portulaca hyb. (Old Fashioned Rose Moss)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 4’ x 36” /<br />

Origin: South America Family: Portulaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#192<br />

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$5.97<br />

#552<br />

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A bit of a mystery as of its origin, this old fashioned “pass-along” plant<br />

ended up in our garden as a gift from Jimmy Turner of the Dallas Arboretum.<br />

We know it is a Rose Moss and not a Purslane even though it has thick<br />

flattened leaves. Its blooms are huge and an electric hot pink but its most<br />

unique feature is its ground-hubbing mat-like growth habit. It looks spectacular<br />

spilling ove the edges of containers and when planted in the ground, creates<br />

a beautiful 2-3” high green carpet highlighted with its knockout flowers.<br />

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A. Pseuderanthemum atropurpureum var. rubrum<br />

(Black Varnish Pseuderanthemum) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 36” x 20” /<br />

Origin: Polynesia Family: Acanthaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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If you’re looking for bold and unique foliage for your garden designs, Black Varnish<br />

<strong>Plant</strong> is just what the plant doctor ordered. It offers large glossy near black leaves on<br />

an upright stalky plant making it ideal to use as a thriller in mixed containers or as an<br />

accent in seasonal beds. Combining well with light colored flowers, it also contrasts<br />

great with white variegated or chartreuse foliage plants. Another contrast it provides<br />

is when its large leaves are next to smaller leaved, fine foliaged things. Apparently<br />

this selection has been around for several decades but recently became popular again.<br />

B. Pseuderanthemum carruthersii<br />

(Variegated Purple False Eranthemum)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Shade / 30”-40” x 30” /<br />

Origin: Polynesia Family: Acanthaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#239<br />

LPB<br />

I’ve always had great success with the False Eranthemums, utilizing their brilliant<br />

foliage color in seasonal design schemes. On our 2004 plant collecting trip to Australia,<br />

I found this unique sport at a Queensland nursery. Its leaves boast a multitude<br />

of colors including purple, creamy white, yellowish, green and pinkish-burgundy.<br />

The colors are lighter in cool weather, turning to deeper tones with summer’s<br />

warmth. Variegated Purple False Eranthemum is an outstanding tropical foliage<br />

plant for beds and containers that is super heat tolerant and really easy to grow.<br />

C. Pycnanthemum tenuifolium (Slender Mountain Mint)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 18” / Zone 4-9<br />

Origin: Eastern North America Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$4.11<br />

#214<br />

SPB<br />

Slender Mountain Mint is a native perennial that provides an interesting texture to the<br />

landscape with its dark green and narrow, almost needle-like leaves. From late spring<br />

through summer it is crowned with flat toped clusters of white flowers with flecks of<br />

pink or lavender. Later in the season the dried flowerheads provide interest, turning<br />

a nice charcoal gray. Once used by Native Americans to bait mink traps, it is a great<br />

nectar plant for butterflies and beneficial insects like predatory wasps. Spreading in<br />

rich soil, it is better behaved when planted in poor soil and kept slightly on the dry side.<br />

D. Rhoeo spathaceae ‘Sitake’s Gold’<br />

(Sitake’s Gold Oyster <strong>Plant</strong>) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 12” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Mexico, Cen America, West Indies Family: Commelinaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#509<br />

LPB<br />

An all new color in spikey foliage on a super attractive low-growing plant.<br />

We’ve only had this a few years but really love having it in the garden. It can<br />

be described as golden, but I think the color is more of an orange. The leaves<br />

have green stripes and pinkish undersides as well. Look for this showy<br />

plant to be popular with garden designers everywhere in years to come.<br />

E. Rhoeo spathaceae ‘Tricolor’ (Tricolor Oyster <strong>Plant</strong>)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 12” x 18” / Origin:<br />

Mexico, Central America, West Indies Family: Commelinaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#494<br />

LPB<br />

Back in the mid 1980’s when I was working as a park employee for the City of<br />

Tulsa, we used a plant called Moses-in-the-Boat in some of the park plantings.<br />

That plant was related to Tricolor Oyster <strong>Plant</strong> but didn’t have anywhere near the<br />

intense color. The brilliantly-hued and dagger-shaped leaves of this tropical allow<br />

gardeners to create amazingly colorful and unique plant combinations. A couple<br />

of reasons are due to its short stature and spiky form. There’s just not much else<br />

that looks like it. Tricolor Oyster plant’s leaves are fleshy thick and striped with<br />

white, pink and green and have pinkish-purple undersides. Sometimes listed in the<br />

genus Tradescantia, it is also known as Variegated Boat Lily and Moses-in-the-Cradle.<br />

F. Rudbeckia grandiflora (Large Coneflower)<br />

Native perennial / Sun / 24” x 18” / Zone 6-9<br />

Origin: South Central and E US, Canada Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#165<br />

LPB<br />

An easy way to remember the botanical name of the Black-Eyed-Susans is to memorize<br />

the phrase ‘Susan has a black eye because rude Becky hit her”. I find the Rudbeckias<br />

an amazing group of plants, many species of which are attractive and useful in the<br />

landscape. Large Coneflower, (not to be confused with Giant Coneflower), has green<br />

mostly basal leaves among which arise tall flower stalks topped with large, Echinacea-<br />

like flowerheads. This is an undemanding native perennial that should be present<br />

in more gardens, especially xeric plantings, native collections and butterfly gardens.


G. Rudbeckia maxima (Giant Coneflower)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 5’-6’ x 2’ / Zone 5-9<br />

Origin: OK, TX, AR, LA Family: Asteraceae<br />

It’s hard to say enough about Giant Coneflower. It is one of my all time favorite<br />

perennials that I think should be in every Southern garden. Think of it as a<br />

Black-Eyed-Susan on steroids. Growing upwards to 5 or 6 feet tall, it’s decked-out<br />

with huge powder blue leaves from which shoot up thick stalks adorned with giant<br />

sombrero-like flowerheads. Gardeners in England love this perennial but have<br />

trouble growing it because it doesn’t get hot enough for it to do well there. Giant<br />

Coneflower’s native range occurs in east Texas, parts of Louisiana, southern Arkansas<br />

and a few counties in southeast Oklahoma, its northern-most limit. This is<br />

where the genetics of the plants we offer began, making them the hardiest possible.<br />

H. Russelia equisetiformis (Dwarf Form)<br />

(Coral <strong>Plant</strong> (Dwarf Form))<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 18” /<br />

Origin: Mexico to Guatemala Family: Scrophulariaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#149<br />

LPB<br />

Heat-loving, cascading and non-stop flowering are words that describe the<br />

Coral <strong>Plant</strong>s. This new selection brings another dimension with its dwarf stature.<br />

In our gardens and containers, Dwarf Coral <strong>Plant</strong> has shown to be more<br />

compact in its growth than the straight species. The stems are shorter and<br />

more densely branched making it ideal for spilling out of smaller sized containers.<br />

It has actually been promoted as a more upright growing shrub in<br />

areas where it is winter hardy. Coral plants are excellent choices for attracting<br />

hummingbirds and for bringing hot dependable color to the summer garden.<br />

I. Russelia equisetiformis ‘St. Elmo’s Fire’<br />

(St. Elmoe’s Fire Coral <strong>Plant</strong>)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Mexico to Guatemale Family: Scrophulariaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#481<br />

LPB<br />

St. Elmo’s Fire is a cool new Coral <strong>Plant</strong> introduced by Mountain States Nursery<br />

in Arizona that features a different look for this group of plants. Instead<br />

of red-orange blooms, the flowers are more of a cherry-red, they are not as<br />

long, and the ends of the tubular blooms are wider, more trumpet-like. There<br />

are more of the tiny leaves present than with the other Coral <strong>Plant</strong>s and the<br />

stems are more upright and not quite as arching. We’ve welcomed this plant’s<br />

different effect to add to the display in our garden from a proven performer.<br />

J. Ruta graveolens (Rue)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 24” x 24” / Zone 5-10<br />

Origin: Southern Europe Family: Rutaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#561<br />

LPB<br />

Besides being a tough and easy perennial with attractive blue leaves, Rue<br />

is a valuable garden plant. A number of species of Swallowtail butterflies<br />

use it as a larval host plant. It was tabbed as the “Herb of Grace” By<br />

William Shakespeare, as it was used to sprinkle holy water before High<br />

Mass. The tip of Rue’s leaf was the model for the suit of clubs in playing<br />

cards. A few people have a skin reaction to its sap when exposed to sunlight.<br />

K. Salvia azurea var. grandiflora (Azure Sage)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 36” x 24” / Zone 4-9<br />

Origin: Central and Eastern US, Mexico Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#528<br />

LPB<br />

The perfect companion plant for fall blooming Goldenrods, Asters and Snow-onthe-Mountain,<br />

this native perennial is the hardiest Salvia species occurring in North<br />

America. In late summer and fall their tall stems are decked out in vibrant medium<br />

to deep blue flowers. In fact, we are fortunate here in Oklahoma to have the variety<br />

grandiflora, which has larger flowers and a neater growth habit than Salvia<br />

azurea var. azurea which occurs in the eastern United States. Sometimes called<br />

Pitcher Sage, Azure Sage can be made to bloom at a shorter height by cutting the<br />

stems back to 12” in late spring and again to about 16” in mid summer if needed.<br />

L. Salvia darcyi (Galena Red Sage)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 30” x 30” / Zones 7-10<br />

Origin: Mexico Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

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$6.98<br />

#148<br />

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The brilliant scarlet-hued blooms of this heat-loving perennial are hummingbird<br />

magnets. Its silvery foliage provides an excellent contrast for the red flowers,<br />

which are quite large for the genus. Discovered near Galena, Mexico by YuccaDo<br />

<strong>Plant</strong>smen, it has proven hardy here in our Stillwater garden. This is a wonderful<br />

addition to the perennial garden for super color when the weather is super hot.<br />

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A. Salvia greggii ‘Pink Preference’<br />

(Pink Preference Autumn Sage)<br />

Perennial/Shrub / Sun / 30” x 30” / Zone 6-9<br />

Origin: Southwest Texas, Mexico Family: Lamiaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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$9.98<br />

#555<br />

GAL<br />

When I was Garden Manager of the Oklahoma Gardening studio in the late 1990’s<br />

we had amassed quite a collection of Salvia greggii cultivars and had them planted<br />

throughout the grounds. On an extremely cold winter spell, they all froze and died<br />

except for Pink Preference. Definitely a tough selection, it was found by Texas<br />

plantsman, Logan Colhoun west of Waco, Texas and introduced by our friends<br />

at Sunshine Nursery. An Oklahoma Proven selection back in 2004, its brilliant<br />

hot pink blooms appear spring through fall with its best show in September and<br />

October. We grow this winning heat and drought-tolerant sub-shrubby perennial<br />

in full sun and cut it back to around 8” just before growth begins each spring.<br />

B. Salvia x ‘Cherry Queen’ (Cherry Queen Sage)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 30” x 30” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Hybrid Family: Lamiaceae<br />

$9.98<br />

#536<br />

GAL<br />

I was fortunate enough to acquire this intriguing perennial on a trip to Athens, Georgia<br />

in 2000. Seeing it bloom in Alan Armitage’s garden on the University of Georgia campus<br />

really made me want to grow it. I’ve had it in the display gardens here at <strong>Bustani</strong><br />

in Stillwater, OK since then where it has performed tremendously well. Raved on by<br />

Armitage, Cherry Queen Sage has fruity scented foliage and bright cherry-red flowers.<br />

It is similar to Salvia greggii and can be used much the same way in beds and borders.<br />

C. Schaueria sp (White-Flowered Golden Plume)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun to Partial Shade / 30” x 30” /<br />

Origin: Brazil Family: Acanthaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#496<br />

LPB<br />

Gorgeous and distinctly different is how most gardeners have described this Brazilian<br />

beauty we collected a few years ago on a trip to Costa Rica. Closely related to<br />

and somewhat resembling a Justicia, White-Flowered Golden Plume is a reliable<br />

bloomer in the hottest weather. Its large feather-duster-like heads are made up of copious<br />

amounts of golden plumey bracts, bracteoles and calyces from which the contrasting<br />

white shrimp-plant-like flowers protrude. In researching this plant I found<br />

that much botanical confusion abounds. It seems to be either the species S. flavicoma<br />

or S. calycotricha, a hybrid of these or a genetic variant of one of them. There is another<br />

less attractive similar plant with non-contrasting pale yellow flowers that many<br />

sources list with these same botanical names. We will let everyone know once we<br />

figure it out. Our offering is truly a knockout and one of our most asked about plants.<br />

D. Scilla scilloides (Chinese Squill)<br />

Perennial Bulb / Sun to Partial Shade / 12” x 12” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: Korea, Japan, China Family: Liliaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#460<br />

SPB<br />

We have greatly enjoyed this relatively unknown little bulb for several years in one<br />

of our raised beds. Flowering in the fall with short spikes of blush pink blooms,<br />

it makes a charming addition to rock gardens or the front of well-drained borders.<br />

Drainage is important because the plant lies dormant during summer and<br />

emerges in August. Tolerant of heat humidity and even a fair amount of moisture,<br />

Chinese Squill is definitely a new and different perennial for the garden.<br />

E. Sedum lineare ‘Variegatum’ (Variegated Sedum)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 4” x 18” / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: China, Japan Family: Crassulaceae<br />

$6.98<br />

#461<br />

LPB<br />

Easy and elegant are words that describe this low-growing perennial. As a succulent,<br />

(plants with fleshy leaves and stems), Variegated Sedum is well adapted<br />

to tough conditions such as drought and extreme heat. It also makes a very attractive<br />

addition to the garden with its variegated green and white inch long<br />

leaves that give it a unique pastel green look. This perennial can be planted in<br />

groups to form a nice soft-colored groundcover, it makes a great rock garden<br />

plant and we absolutely love it spilling over the edges of containers. Variegated<br />

Sedum has been very popular at our on-site plant sales the past few years.<br />

F. Senecio vira-vira (Silver Groundsel)<br />

Perennial / Sun / 24” x 30” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Argentina Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#211<br />

LPB<br />

With the protection of a fence or building to its north and the benefit of a welldrained<br />

soil, Silver Goundsel makes a delicate perennial in zones 7 and south. A silver-leaved<br />

daisy from Argentina, it looks terrific in borders, color beds or containers.<br />

Its finely dissected silvery foliage is almost white due to its thick covering of pubescence.<br />

Occasionally displayed, are this plant’s flowers, interesting rayless daisies<br />

of creamy white or soft lemon that are an excellent nectar source for butterflies.


G. Sida fallax ‘Black Coral’ (Orange Ilima) NEW<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Hawaii Family: Malvaceae<br />

One of the patio container plants we’ve grown and come to love the last few years is<br />

Orange Ilima. It is a charming little Hibiscus relative from Hawaii that blooms with<br />

amazing orange colored blossoms. The official flower for the island of O’ahu, its<br />

blooms are used to make Leis, which take around 700 flowers for a single Lei. It used<br />

to be that only Royalty could wear ilima Lei but now everyone can enjoy them. This<br />

particular selection, Black coral, is named as such because of its dark colored branches.<br />

We love the combination of dark stems, deep green leaves with its cool orange flowers.<br />

If grown in a container, Orange Ilima can be brought inside for over-wintering.<br />

H. Sinningia ‘Tante’ (Tante Hardy Sinningia) NEW<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 18” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Hybrid (Argentina) Family: Gesneriaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#651<br />

LPB<br />

I don’t know what impresses me more about this plant, the fact that it often survives<br />

our Oklahoma winters or the fact that it blooms well during our hottest summers.<br />

Tante Hardy Sinningia is a hybrid developed by Ted Bona that blooms with sweet<br />

scented salmon-pink colored flowers. A close relative of African violets, this plant<br />

sometimes goes by the name of Violet Slipper Gloxinia. To survive winter it should<br />

be planted in a well-drained soil in a protected location or it can be placed in a<br />

container which can be brought into a garage to over-winter in a dormant state.<br />

I. Sinningia tubiflora (Hardy White Sinningia) NEW<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 18” x 18” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Argentina, Uruguay Family: Gesneriaceae<br />

$7.47<br />

#655<br />

LPB<br />

Sinningias are African Violet relatives from Argentina and Uruguay that have<br />

sweet fuity-scented blooms that attract hummingbirds. Many gardeners are<br />

surprised to learn that they will survive Oklahoma winters if planted in a welldrained<br />

sunny location that has the proection of a wall or fence to block cold<br />

north winds. This hardy white form gives the garden a truly unique look with<br />

its pendulous long tubular blooms of pristine white. Sometimes called Hardy<br />

Gloxinia, this plant is low growing, tuber-forming and has soft fuzzy leaves.<br />

J. Solanum quitoense (Bed of Nails)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 36” x 36” /<br />

Origin: Northwest South America Family: Solanaceae<br />

$7.47<br />

#646<br />

LPB<br />

Many gardeners enjoy this Andean member of the Nightshade family because of<br />

its bizarre appearance. Others like growing it for the orange acidic fruit it produces.<br />

I like Bed-of-Nails as a garden ornamental because of the size of its leaves.<br />

Contrast among other plants is definitely what you get with its huge 18” or longer<br />

leaves studded with purple thorns that arise along the veins. Also called Naranjilla,<br />

(“Little Orange”), it is cultivated commercially in Ecuador and was once a favorite<br />

food of the Incas. Botanically this species is most likely the variety septentrionale.<br />

K. Solanum rantonnetii ‘Lynn’s Variegated’<br />

(Variegated Paraguayan Nightshade)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: South America Family: Solanaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#431<br />

LPB<br />

A few years ago, after attending a Garden Writers Association symposium in<br />

VanCouver, BC and shooting an episode of Oklahoma Gardening at Butchart<br />

Gardens, I stopped by a California nursery on my way home and discovered<br />

this gem of a plant. . A striking variegated selection of the “Blue Potato<br />

Tree”, or Paraguayan Nightshade as we call it, this tender plant is guaranteed<br />

to get noticed in the garden. It has bluish-purple blooms that standout magnificently<br />

against leaves so variegated, the entire plant looks almost all white.<br />

Use Variegated Paraguayan Nightshade in beds or containers and you’ll be<br />

amazed by its gorgeous foliage that doesn’t scorch even in southern summers.<br />

L. Solanum wendlandii (Paradise Flower)<br />

Tropical Vine / Full Sun Best, Very Slight Shade / 8-12’ /<br />

Origin: Costa Rica Family: Solanaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

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$11.88<br />

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This is one of the neatest new vines we’ve grown in a while. The huge clusters of<br />

lilac-blue flowers are amazing, over 6” across. It was a definite favorite when the<br />

Garden Writers Association group toured our garden in fall of 2007. Thick near succulent<br />

stems and dark green leaves of this scrambling climber provide a nice backdrop<br />

for the impressive blooms. Costa Rica is the home of this heat-loving beauty.<br />

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Stachytarpheta<br />

The False Vervains are some of the top hummingbird<br />

and butterfly attracting plants we grow.<br />

These verbena and lantana relatives also go by<br />

the names of Porterweed, Snakeweed, Smuggler’s<br />

Vervain and Rooster Comb. The botanical name<br />

of this tropical American genus is Stachytarpheta,<br />

(pronounced stack-ee-tar-fet-a). There’s a good<br />

reason gardeners who enjoy hummingbirds plant<br />

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these tropical color plants in their beds and containers.<br />

When our hummingbirds migrate to the<br />

American Tropics during winter they feed on the<br />

nectar of the False Vervains growing naturally in<br />

those areas. So what better plants to welcome them<br />

when they arrive back at their summer home than<br />

a familiar tasty food source. Butterflies love the<br />

clusters of flowers as well because they can land<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

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A. Solidago rigida (Rigid Goldenrod)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 24” x 24” / Zone 4-9<br />

Origin: Central and Eastern North America Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#203<br />

LPB<br />

Goldenrods are valuable components of the fall landscape. They are included in<br />

botanical gardens worldwide for their fleecy yellow autumn flower panicles. Rigid<br />

Goldenrod is one with rough and hairy leaves and stems that are not fed on by<br />

deer. It doesn’t look like a typical goldenrod in that its blooms are larger and<br />

borne in flattened panicles at the stem tips. Also shorter than most species, it is a<br />

dynamite butterfly plant and provides a food source for small birds with its seeds.<br />

Deep-rooted and drought tolerant, give it a poor soil in a dry part of the landscape.<br />

B. Sorghastrum nutans (Indian Grass)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 3’-4’ x 2’ / Zone 4-10<br />

Origin: Eastern 2/3 of North America Family: Poaceae<br />

$7.00<br />

#362<br />

LPB<br />

This is my absolute favorite native grass. When my interest in plants first began,<br />

I would notice this bluish-leaved grass with coppery blonde plumes in fall and<br />

wonder what it was. Found in each of our 77 counties, Indian Grass is the official<br />

state grass of Oklahoma. It looks great in the landscape as it is a bunchgrass and<br />

not an aggressive runner. A dominant species of the Tallgrass Prairie, it will grow<br />

in a variety of soil types, including sand or clay. Give it a poor soil and no extra<br />

water once it is established and cut it back to around 6”-8” from the ground before<br />

growth begins in spring. Songbirds are occasionally seen eating the seeds of Indian<br />

Grass and its flowering plumes are so showy, they are actually visited by bees.<br />

on a stem and sample several flowers with their<br />

long proboscis without having to move around.<br />

False Vervains are rarely seen in American gardens<br />

even though they bloom continuously spring to<br />

frost with loads of strong whip-like flower spikes<br />

in jubilant colors of red, purple, blue and pink.<br />

C. Stachytarpheta frantzii (Purple False Vervain)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 36” x 36” /<br />

Origin: West Indies, South America Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#197<br />

LPB<br />

If you ever get a chance to visit our nursery during one of our September<br />

open weekends, you’ll get a chance to view many of our plants after<br />

a season of growth. Lots of September visitors continually ask about<br />

the Purple False Vervain. The plants are always in full bloom with numerous<br />

deep purple wands, which attract multitudes of butterflies. Heat-tough<br />

and long-blooming, this tropical is a real attention grabber in the landscape.<br />

D. Stachytarpheta frantzii ‘Deep Blue’<br />

(Deep Blue False Vervain)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 36” x 36” /<br />

Origin: West Indies, South America Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#258<br />

LPB<br />

We’re excited to be offering this stunning new False Vervain with flower spikes<br />

of deep satiny blue. Distinctively different then Purple False Vervain or any<br />

Stachytarpheta we’ve ever seen before, this deep blue selection repeatedly gets<br />

asked about in our mixed border garden. Deep Blue False Vervain is a prized<br />

acquisition from a recent trip to Florida. Let it provide your garden with continuous<br />

heat resistant blooms loaded with hummingbird and butterfly attracting nectar.<br />

E. Stachytarpheta mutabilis (Pink False Vervain)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 36” x 36” /<br />

Origin: Central and South America. Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#185<br />

LPB<br />

This verbena relative is heat and humidity tolerant and provides the garden<br />

with nearly continuous flowering. The interesting pinkish-salmon colored<br />

blooms appear in long terminal snake-like spikes throughout the growing season.<br />

False Vervain can reach 8 feet tall in the wild but it only grows to around<br />

3 feed in the garden. One of the best new plants for butterfly gardens, it also attracts<br />

hummingbirds. This selection is sometimes listed as the cultivar ‘Coral’.


G. Stachytarpheta ‘Red Compacta’<br />

(Dwarf Red False Vervain)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 24” x 24” /<br />

Origin: Central and South America. Family: Verbenaceae<br />

This brilliantly colored compact grower was given to me by Texas plantsman<br />

Greg Grant in the late 90’s. Several gardeners agree that this is probably the best<br />

of the False Vervains. It makes a great bedding plant when used in mass or as<br />

a single specimen. The bright red flower spikes are remarkable in the way they<br />

attract butterflies and hummingbirds to the garden. This heat tolerant beauty is<br />

splendid when contrasted with the white foliage of Variegated Jewels of Opar.<br />

H. Stapelia gigantea (Carrion Flower)<br />

Tropical Color / Sun / 8” x 24” /<br />

Origin: South Africa, Zambia Family: Apocynaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#134<br />

LPB<br />

This succulent, cactus-looking, spine free plant is a real gem of nature. Its thick<br />

four-angled stems produce several large balloon-like flower buds in late summer<br />

and fall which upon opening reveal a truly stunning example of botanical artwork.<br />

Imagine a 10-16” wide 5 lobed buckskin-tan starfish overlaid with wavy<br />

maroon lines in a circular pattern that gets tighter as it funnels into the center. It’s<br />

an almost hypnotizing effect. Of course the word carrion means dead and putrefying<br />

flesh and refers to the flower’s aroma, which helps it attract its pollinators,<br />

flies. The smell is not offensive if grown outside (recommended). Also called<br />

Zulu Giant, Starfish Flower, Giant Toad Flower and Dead Horse Cactus; Carrion<br />

Flower is definitely a source of intrigue and entertainment at fall garden parties.<br />

I. Stemodia tomentosa (Wooly Stemodia)<br />

Half-hardy Perennial / Sun / 8” x 36” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: TX, Mexico Family: Scrophulariaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#354<br />

LPB<br />

Wheather it is spilling out of pots, making a low splash of silver in the front of<br />

borders, or cascading over the edge of raised beds, Wooly Stemodia is sure to impress<br />

with its velvety and silvery leaves. The foliage does have a soft felted look<br />

and feel and is dotted with small purple flowers. Low growing and mat-forming,<br />

it is drought and heat tolerant and it is not browsed by deer. Wooly Stemodia occasionally<br />

survives the winter in our garden. It grows best in a hot sunny spot<br />

with good drainage and can be used much the same way as Silver Falls Dichondra.<br />

J. Symphyotrychum drummondii (Drummond’s Aster)<br />

Native Perennial / Shade, Partial Shade, Sun / 30” x 30” / Zone<br />

3-10 Origin: Central and Eastern US Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#566<br />

LPB<br />

I’ve long admired this native perennial for its ability to bloom well even in shaded<br />

areas. It has broad leaves for an Aster and sturdy stems to display its fall floral<br />

show. Drummond’s Aster puts forth numerous small white to lavender flower<br />

heads that can brighten up any shaded fall garden. The small disk florets in the<br />

center of the flower head are yellow when fresh then turn dusky purple as they age.<br />

This is a tough plant that will grow in a variety of soil types and light exposures.<br />

K. Talinum calycinum (Rock Pink)<br />

Native Perennial / Sun / 6” x 6” / Zone 6-9<br />

Origin: Central & S. Central US Family: Portulacacea<br />

$6.98<br />

#437<br />

LPB<br />

Rock Pink is a cute little native related to Rose Moss with bright Pink jewel-like<br />

blooms held above small succulent leaves. The perfect plant for a rock garden or<br />

xeric planting, it survives drought by storing water within its leaves. The cheerful<br />

blooms open in the early evening, greeting you as you arrive home from work.<br />

This perennial sometimes goes by the common names of Flame flower or Fame<br />

Flower and may also be found listed botanically as Phemeranthus calycinum. It<br />

is found naturally on thin rocky or sandy soil so excellent drainage is important.<br />

L. Tanacetum vulgare ‘Isla Gold’ (Golden Tansy)<br />

Perennial / Sun to Partial Shade / 24”x 30” / Zone 4-9<br />

Origin: Europe, Asia Family: Asteraceae<br />

$5.13<br />

#280<br />

SPB<br />

$9.98<br />

#540<br />

GAL<br />

If you’re looking for an extraordinary hardy foliage plant with loads of garden<br />

appeal, Golden Tansy is just for you. This perennial is lavishly decked-out with<br />

fern-like, finely-cut bright yellow foliage. It holds its color well through the heat<br />

of summer and produces yellow rayless daisies in the fall. Its cultivar name, ‘Isla<br />

Gold’, comes from the place it was discovered, the now-closed Isla Nursery in<br />

Cambridgeshire, UK. This perennial contrasts beautifully with the green leaves of<br />

grasses, plants with blue or purple foliage, or pretty much anything in the garden.<br />

G<br />

I<br />

J<br />

L<br />

www.bustaniplantfarm.com 43<br />

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A. Thunbergia gregorii (Orange Clockvine)<br />

Tropical Color/Tropical Vine / Sun to Partial Shade / 8’ /<br />

Origin: Tropical Africa Family: Acanthaceae<br />

Pick Up Orders Can be Placed Monday - Friday 9-5 Phone 405.372.3379<br />

A<br />

B<br />

$8.96<br />

#272<br />

LPB<br />

Orange Clockvine is quickly becoming one of my favorite tropical vines. It wins<br />

hands down compared to any Black-Eyed-Susan vine, (T. alata), when it comes<br />

to flowering and vividness of bloom. Our newly acquired selection from Kenya<br />

has flowers of particularly intense orange that pop out of large hairy buds with a<br />

showy brownish-maroon striping. Called clock vine because the flowers tend to<br />

turn towards the sun, this twining climber blooms constantly. A great choice for<br />

an arbor, trellis, chain link fence or mail box post (with twine or wire attached).<br />

B. Verbena bonarienses (Brazilian Verbena) NEW<br />

Perennial / Sun / 36”x 24” / Zone 7-10<br />

Origin: Brazil, Argentina Family: Vervenaceae<br />

$5.97<br />

#434<br />

LPB<br />

Constantly attracting butterflies and giving the garden lots of purple color,<br />

this “Verbena-on-a-stick” is a truly amazing performer. Very versatile<br />

in its use in the landscape, Brazilian Verbena is a wonderful see-through<br />

plant utilized equally well in the front, middle or back of beds and borders.<br />

Also known as Purple Top Verbena, you can expect a few seedlings to pop<br />

up around the garden, but not to the point of being a problem in our area.<br />

C. Vigna caracalla (Corkscrew Vine)<br />

Tropical Color Vine / Sun / Up to 15’ /<br />

Origin: Centracl and South America Family: Faabaceae<br />

$8.96<br />

#499<br />

LPB<br />

This is the plant that Thomas Jefferson described as, “The most beautiful bean<br />

in the world”, when he grew it at his Monticello estate over 200 years ago. We<br />

couldn’t agree more. The stunning flower clusters of this climbing legume are<br />

white to pink-purple and fade to a soft cream. Each bloom’s most astonishing<br />

feature, however, is its delicious fragrance. It is literally like perfume. A wealth<br />

of confusion exists between Corkscrew Vine and another vine with pale purple<br />

and only faintly fragrant flowers. This less favorable vine is often sold as and<br />

listed as V. caracalla in reputable educational resources. After thorough research<br />

my belief is that the multi-colored and highly fragrant vine is indeed Vigna caracalla<br />

which is synonymous with Phaseolus caracalla, and that the pale purple<br />

vine is a different species seldom labeled correctly, perhaps Vigna adenantha or<br />

Phaseolus giganteus. The name Snail Vine is also used to describe either plant.<br />

D. Vitex agnus-castus ‘Silver Spires’<br />

(Silver Spires Vitex)<br />

Shrub / Sun / Up to 10’ / Zone 6-10<br />

Origin: S Europe, W Asia Family: Verbenaceae<br />

$7.95<br />

#493<br />

LPB<br />

It’s hard to be beat Vitex, (a.k.a Chaste Tree), when choosing a tough heat loving<br />

deciduous shrub with a long flowering season. Most common are selections<br />

with lavender colored flowers but if you’ve been looking for something<br />

truly unique, try a white blooming variety. Silver Spires is by far the best of<br />

the whites. In fact, it won a beauty contest when compared to other white vitex<br />

in a trial at Longwood Gardens. Its stand-out features include silver undersides<br />

of the leaves and large 12” panicles of pure white flowers with darker calyces<br />

along with a fountain-like appearance from its arching branch tips. This<br />

elegant butterfly-attracting shrub can be trained as a small tree or kept small by<br />

cutting it back hard each spring enabling its use in a perennial or mixed border.


Spring 2013 Three Ways to Place an Order for Pick UP:<br />

Order Form Mail Orders: Can be mailed direct to: <strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong><br />

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Phone Orders: Call 405-372-3379 1313 East 44th Ave<br />

On-Line: bustaniplantfarm.com Stillwater, OK 74074<br />

Orders can be picked up at the nursery during our spring hours - We no longer ship plants.<br />

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Common Name to Botanical Name Cross-Reference<br />

‘Alabama Sunset’ Coleus ........................ Coleus<br />

‘Anna’ Coleus ...................................... Coleus<br />

Arizona Butterfly Weed ...................... Asclepias<br />

Arizona Red Shades Gaillardia .............Gaillardia<br />

Arizona Sun Gaillardia ........................Gaillardia<br />

Azure Sage ............................................Salvia<br />

Baby Swan White Coneflower ............Echinaceae<br />

Bailey’s Hedgehog Cactus ...............Echinocereus<br />

Barbara’s Buttons ..............................Marshallia<br />

Bat-Face Cuphea .................................. Cuphea<br />

Bed of Nails .......................................Solanum<br />

Bird of Paradise Shrub ..................... Caesalpinia<br />

Black Leaved Sky Flower ................ Eranthemum<br />

‘Black Patent Leather’ Coleus .................. Coleus<br />

Black Varnish Pseuderanthemum .................<br />

Pseuderanthemum<br />

Blepharis .......................................... Blepharis<br />

Blue False Indigo .................................. Baptisia<br />

Blue Star Creeper ..............................Laurentia<br />

Bolero Hummingbird Mint .................Agastache<br />

Brazilian Button ...........................Centratherum<br />

Brazilian Verbena ................................Verbena<br />

Bronze Sea Berry ............................... Haloragis<br />

Burgundy Gaillardia ............................Gaillardia<br />

Busse’s Pentas ........................................ Pentas<br />

Caribbean Copper <strong>Plant</strong> .....................Euphorbia<br />

Carnival Perennial Lantana .....................Lantana<br />

Carrion Flower .................................... Stapelia<br />

Cherry Bells Spotted Bellflower ......... Campanula<br />

Cherry Queen Sage .................................Salvia<br />

Chinese Squill ..........................................Scilla<br />

Chipola River Daisy ........................... Coreopsis<br />

‘Chuluota’ Coleus ................................. Coleus<br />

Climbing Snapdragon ...................... Maurandya<br />

Cluster-Head Dianthus .........................Dianthus<br />

Colchester White Centaurea ...............Centaurea<br />

Colorado Columbine ..........................Aquilegia<br />

Copper Kalanchoe ........................... Kalanchoe<br />

Coral Bean Hybrid ............................. Erythrina<br />

Coral <strong>Plant</strong> (Dwarf Form) ...................... Russelia<br />

Corkscrew Vine ......................................Vigna<br />

Crossandra (Orange) ........................Crossandra<br />

Curry <strong>Plant</strong> ...................................Helichrysum<br />

Dallas Red Lantana ...............................Lantana<br />

David Verity Cigar <strong>Plant</strong> ....................... Cuphea<br />

Deep Blue False Vervain ............. Stachytarpheta<br />

Donkey’s Ears.................................. Kalanchoe<br />

Dotted Blazing Star ................................ Liatris<br />

Double Red Morning Glory ..................Ipomoea<br />

Double-Flowering Blue Butterfly Pea .........Clitoria<br />

Drummond’s Aster ................ Symphyotrychum<br />

‘Duke of Swirl’ Coleus ........................... Coleus<br />

Dwarf Red False Vervain ............. Stachytarpheta<br />

Eastern Bluestar ................................. Amsonia<br />

Elegant Blazing Star ................................ Liatris<br />

‘Finger Paint’ Coleus ............................. Coleus<br />

Fireworks Globe Amaranth .............. Gomphrena<br />

Formosa Lily ......................................... Lilium<br />

‘Freckles’ Coleus ................................... Coleus<br />

Galena Red Sage .....................................Salvia<br />

Giant Coneflower .............................Rudbeckia<br />

Giant Pineapple Lily ............................ Eucomis<br />

Golden False Indigo ............................. Baptisia<br />

Golden Tansy ................................. Tanacetum<br />

Green Swan Flower ............................Ecbolium<br />

Greg Grant Variegated Lantana ..............Lantana<br />

Greystone Gold Cestrum ..................... Cestrum<br />

Hairy Balls ................................Gomphocarpus<br />

Half-Shrub Evening Primrose ..............Calylophus<br />

Hardy Blue Passion Flower ................... Passiflora<br />

Hardy Heliotrope ......................... Heliotropium<br />

Hardy White Sinningia ........................ Sinningia<br />

Heirloom Dianthus ..............................Dianthus<br />

Heirloom Shasta Daisy ................Leucanthemum<br />

Henna .............................................. Lawsonia<br />

Himalayan Gloxinia ...........................Incarvellia<br />

Hummingbird Shrub ......................Anisacanthus<br />

Hybrid Passion Flower ........................ Passiflora<br />

Inferno Copperleaf .............................Acalypha<br />

Inspiration Passion Vine ...................... Passiflora<br />

Japanese Dianthus ...............................Dianthus<br />

Kenya Shrub Morning Glory .................Ipomoea<br />

King’s Crown ................................... Dicliptera<br />

Kona Gold Copperleaf ........................Acalypha<br />

Large Coneflower ..............................Rudbeckia<br />

‘Large Marge’ Coleus ............................ Coleus<br />

Lavender Cat’s Whiskers ................ Orthosiphon<br />

Lavender Pentas ..................................... Pentas<br />

Lavender Trailing Lantana .....................Lantana<br />

Life Saver <strong>Plant</strong> ....................................Huernia<br />

Lime Duranta ......................................Duranta<br />

Lion’s Ears ......................................... Leonotis<br />

Marbled Jacob’s Ladder ................... Pedilanthus<br />

‘Mardi Gras’ Copperleaf .....................Acalypha<br />

Marginata Bronze Copperleaf ...............Acalypha<br />

Maui Wormwood .............................. Artemisia<br />

Mesa Yellow Gaillardia .......................Gaillardia<br />

Mexican Plume .....................................Justicia<br />

Morning Light Maiden Grass ............. Miscanthus<br />

Moy Grande Hibiscus .......................... Hibiscus<br />

Musical Notes Clerodendrum........Clerodendrum<br />

‘Nairobi Blush’ Trailing Lantana .............Lantana<br />

Narrow-Leaf Purple Coneflower .......... Echinacea<br />

Narrow-leaf Sunflower ...................... Helianthus<br />

‘Nuggett’ Coleus .................................. Coleus<br />

Oakhurst Pineapple Lily ....................... Eucomis<br />

Oblongleaf Twinflower .................... Dyschoriste<br />

Old Fashioned Rose Moss ................... Portulaca<br />

Orange Bulbine Lily.............................. Bulbine<br />

Orange Clockvine ........................... Thunbergia<br />

Orange Ilima ............................................Sida<br />

‘Orange King’ Coleus ............................ Coleus<br />

Orange Peel Cestrum .......................... Cestrum<br />

Orange-Scarlet Mallow ......................... Pavonia<br />

Pale Purple Coneflower ...................... Echinacea<br />

Paradise Flower ..................................Solanum<br />

‘Peters Wonder’ Coleus ......................... Coleus<br />

‘Pineapple Sun’ Coleus .......................... Coleus<br />

Pink Chinese Indigo ...........................Indigofera<br />

Pink False Vervain ...................... Stachytarpheta<br />

Pink Morning Glory Tree .....................Ipomoea<br />

Pink Preference Autumn Sage ...................Salvia<br />

Pink Summer Phlox ................................. Phlox<br />

Pink Swamp Milkweed ........................ Asclepias<br />

Pink Turk’s Cap ..............................Malvaviscus<br />

Plazia .................................................... Plazia<br />

Poppy Mallow ................................... Callirhoe<br />

Port St. Johns Creeper ........................ Podranea<br />

Prairie Gaillardia ................................Gaillardia<br />

Princess Caroline Fountain Grass ....... Pennisetum<br />

Punch Bowl Gaillardia .........................Gaillardia<br />

Purple Cestrum ................................... Cestrum<br />

Purple False Vervain ................... Stachytarpheta<br />

Purple Flash Pepper ............................. Capsicm<br />

Purple Lady Iresine .................................Iresine<br />

Raspberry Fire Dianthus .......................Dianthus<br />

Rayless Gaillardia ...............................Gaillardia<br />

Red Firecracker Vine .......................... Manettia<br />

Red Pencil <strong>Plant</strong> ................................Euphorbia<br />

Red Shrimp <strong>Plant</strong> ..................................Justicia<br />

Red Wing ....................................Heteropterys<br />

Rigid Goldenrod ................................. Solidago<br />

Rock Pink .......................................... Talinum<br />

Rough Blazing Star ................................. Liatris<br />

Ruby Grass .......................................... Melinis<br />

Rue ....................................................... Ruta<br />

Samantha Lantana ................................Lantana<br />

Shell Bush .................................... Orthosiphon<br />

Shorty Yellow Bulbine .......................... Bulbine<br />

Silky Gold Butterfly Weed ................... Asclepias<br />

Silver Groundsel .................................. Senecio<br />

Silver Spires Vitex ................................... Vitex<br />

Silver Spoon Kalanchoe .................... Kalanchoe<br />

Single Red Confederate Rose ................ Hibiscus<br />

Sitake’s Gold Oyster <strong>Plant</strong> .......................Rhoeo<br />

Slender Mountain Mint ...............Pycnanthemum<br />

Smooth Penstemon ..........................Penstemon<br />

South African Foxglove .................. Ceratotheca<br />

Sparkling Burgundy Pineapple Lily ......... Eucomis<br />

Spurred Butterfly Pea ..................... Centrosema<br />

St. Elmoe’s Fire Coral <strong>Plant</strong> ................... Russelia<br />

Stars and Stripes Pentas........................... Pentas<br />

Stone Cress ...................................Aethionema<br />

Striped Ganges Primrose ..................... Asystasia<br />

‘Stu Junior’ Coleus ................................ Coleus<br />

Susan’s Little Gem Cuphea .................... Cuphea<br />

Tante Hardy Sinningia ........................ Sinningia<br />

Taza Grande Cup Flower .............. Nierembergia<br />

Texas Greeneyes ............................. Berlandiera<br />

Texas Perennial Lantana ........................Lantana<br />

Thread-Leaf Blue Star ......................... Amsonia<br />

Tokajer Gaillardia ..............................Gaillardia<br />

Tricolor Oyster <strong>Plant</strong> ..............................Rhoeo<br />

Tropical Butterfly Weed ...................... Asclepias<br />

Tugela Ruby Pineapple Lily ................... Eucomis<br />

Turk’s Cap .....................................Malvaviscus<br />

Variegated Beautyberry ..................... Callicarpa<br />

Variegated Ganges Primrose ................ Asystasia<br />

Variegated Myrtle .................................Myrtus<br />

Variegated Paraguayan Nightshade ........Solanum<br />

Variegated Purple False Eranthemum ...........<br />

Pseuderanthemum<br />

Variegated Sedum ................................ Sedum<br />

Variegated Tapioca ............................. Manihot<br />

Wanda Hybrid Phlox ............................... Phlox<br />

White Cat’s Whiskers ..................... Orthosiphon<br />

White False Indigo ............................... Baptisia<br />

White Morning Glory Tree ...................Ipomoea<br />

White Shrimp <strong>Plant</strong> ...............................Justicia<br />

White Turk’s Cap............................Malvaviscus<br />

White Variegated Alternanthera .....Alternanthera<br />

White-Flowered Golden Plume .............Schaueria<br />

Woodland Agave .............................. Manfreda<br />

Wooly Morning Glory .........................Argyreia<br />

Wooly Stemodia ................................Stemodia<br />

Yellow Cestrum .................................. Cestrum<br />

Yellow Lobster Claw ............................ Gmelina<br />

Yellow Perennial Fanflower ................. Goodenia<br />

Zinn Orange Perennial Lantana ..............Lantana


1313 East 44th Avenue<br />

Stillwater, Oklahoma 74074<br />

Garden photos taken in summer 2012<br />

How to Place an Order for Pickup<br />

Online Orders:<br />

www.bustaniplantfarm.com<br />

Mail your order to:<br />

<strong>Bustani</strong> <strong>Plant</strong> <strong>Farm</strong><br />

1313 East 44th Ave, Stillwater, OK 74074<br />

Phone Orders:<br />

405-372-3379<br />

www.bustaniplantfarm.com<br />

405-372-3379<br />

info@bustaniplantfarm.com<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

US POSTAGE<br />

PAID<br />

PERMIT #1541<br />

OKLA CITY, OK<br />

Ask us about setting up a tour<br />

for your group or garden club<br />

2013 OPENING WEEKEND<br />

Thur, April 11 9 am to 6 pm<br />

Fri, April 12 9 am to 6 pm<br />

Sat, April 13 9 am to 6 pm<br />

Dates and Times<br />

We Are Open<br />

Spring<br />

Tuesday thru Saturday 9 am to 6 pm<br />

April 11 thru June 1<br />

Fall<br />

Tuesday thru Saturday 9 am to 6 pm<br />

September 5 thru September 28

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