Dotted Gayfeather

$16.00

Pre-orders will be available for pick-up as early as May 1.

When most of our flowers are winding down for the season, Liatris punctata (a.k.a. dotted gayfeather) is just gearing up! Blooming September to October, liatris is a quintessential Kansas native to our pollinators collecting for the winter or as they are migrating through.

The bright purple flower spikes actually bloom from the top downward, which if you don’t know, is unusual! Liatris has a starchy root system that makes it extremely drought tolerant.

Container Size: Quart (overwintered)

Height: 12-18”

Pre-orders will be available for pick-up as early as May 1.

When most of our flowers are winding down for the season, Liatris punctata (a.k.a. dotted gayfeather) is just gearing up! Blooming September to October, liatris is a quintessential Kansas native to our pollinators collecting for the winter or as they are migrating through.

The bright purple flower spikes actually bloom from the top downward, which if you don’t know, is unusual! Liatris has a starchy root system that makes it extremely drought tolerant.

Container Size: Quart (overwintered)

Height: 12-18”

A Note from the Grower

All of my perennial natives are sold in deep 6-packs, quarts or two quarts, depending on what I have deemed necessary for establishment success (based on my production and overwintering trials). Since I am gathering seeds directly from the Southern Flint Hills region of our prairie, my plants’ genetics are solid and can withstand the soil and climate of our native area.

Regionally native plants also have the added benefit of being ideal pollinator plants. Many of our local birds and insects rely on these plants in a way that nursery-produced cultivars cannot be relied.

For best establishment, aim to plant after soil temperatures have warmed (May-July) or before our first average frost (September-October).

A Note on Native Gardening

Natural landscaping is not manicured, but it can be beautiful! It most certainly is beneficial to our planet. The varieties of plants that I grow in my native program are wild, collected from my family’s 6th generation rangeland. That means that no breeder but nature has touched them.

I avoid producing naturalized species of plants, sticking to tried-and-true native plants that were here before we were. I also do not produce invasive species. To be classified as invasive, plants must be non-native and must be inhibiting the natural populations that already exist here in the midwest.

Native plants can still feel “weedy” to gardeners. While native prairies rely on natural weather patterns for maintenance, our native gardens rely on us for maintenance. Establishing multiple natives in a controlled space, and ensuring that one species does not overtake the others is the main task of the native gardener.