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June Monrovia Pick

 
Monrovia’s Tiny Tots for Tiny Spots Collection

 

Monrovia’s Tiny Tots for Tiny Spots Collection helps you add color, texture and interest to small garden areas, rock gardens and patio containers.  Tiny Tots varieties have been selected to be 12" or smaller and to be successful in Wisconsin gardens.  Use them to create a tapestry of color in between steps, rock walls or as a ground cover.       

 

No space is too small for these little beauties!  Each variety boasts colors that will dramatically change your landscape.  The use of dark and light flower colors will create contrast and dimension.   Keep in mind that it is best to stick with a small color palette when adding color to your garden.  Look for Monrovia’s Tiny Tots for Tiny Spots Collection at Stein Gardens & Gifts and transform a small outdoor space into a beautiful flower garden.

 

Triumph Aster:  Loads of large, cheerful daisy flowers cover the dense green foliage on this butterfly nectar plant.  At home with natives in short grass meadows and wild gardens, the compact form makes it ideal for pots and at the front of perennial borders.
Lewisii King Edward Yarrow:  Soft yellow flowers bloom in July and fade to cream as they mature. The flowers attract butterflies and bloom above compact, spreading mounds of woolly foliage.  Foliage is aromatic.  Use as a cut or dried flower in bouquets.
Rokey's Purple Rockcress:  A blanket of purple flowers tops the gray-green foliage on mat-forming stems of this perennial.  Excellent for rock gardens or filling spaces between stepping stones.
 
 
Etain Viola:  Large, soft lemon yellow blossoms with elegant lavender margins.  Full of flowers in spring and early summer, it reblooms lightly through the whole season.  Lovely fragrance!
Cameo Blue and White Columbine: Fall in love with this plant for late spring color.  The nodding two-tone blue and white flowers are long-lasting and appear from late spring to early summer. Use the flowers as a source of nectar to attract birds and butterflies. 
Frosty Fire Dianthus: A ground hugging carpet of
gray-green foliage with 1", vivid scarlet red flowers.  Fine edging for foot paths, in rock gardens, perennial borders or as filler in cottage gardens.  Outstanding in pots and trough gardens.
 
Cotton Tail Thrift: This neat and tidy plant forms compact mounds of grass-like foliage with slender stems of clean white ball-shaped flower heads in May to June - adorable!  Use as cut or dried flowers in arrangements.
Inshriach Pink Astilbe:  This dwarf astilbe features glossy, deeply dissected bronze-green foliage and stunning, feathery pale pink flowers in mid-summer.  Beautiful when used as contrast against low growing conifers.
 
Habanera Red Tip English Daisy: This charming English Daisy has large, double blooms that resemble sea anemones!   The bicolor flowers have a swirled pattern with quilled petals that are white with red tips.   The stunning blooms appear in May to June and attract butterflies.
Blue Ice Hosta:  This dwarf hosta displays intense blue heart-shaped leaves and pale lavender bell-shaped flowers in July to August.   The thick blue cupped foliage makes an excellent contrast with green leafed and variegated plants.
Georgenberg Geum: A charming old-fashioned flower for the cottage garden.  Neat clumps of foliage have a lacy charm with bright orange-yellow flowers that bloom from May to late summer.  Use to add bright spots of color to garden beds.
 
Leather Leaf Powder Puff:  This perennial forms a dense, low mat of evergreen leaves that are adorned with hundreds of light blue, powder-puff-like flower heads in May and June.  Use as fine edging along pathways or plant in rock garden nooks.
Little Grapette Daylily:  This dwarf daylily has sturdy clumps of grassy foliage and miniature-size grape colored flowers in June.  The flowers bloom in profusion, are superb in cut flower arrangements and attract butterflies.
Mini Pearl Daylily:  This dwarf daylily has sturdy clumps of grassy foliage and fragrant, melon-pink colored flowers in May to July.  The flowers bloom in profusion, are superb in cut flower arrangements and attract butterflies.
 
Raspberry Swirl Dianthus: Light pink blooms with raspberry colored picotee edges and eyes.  As the flowers mature, the petals fade to white with magenta picotee edges.  Raspberry Swirl has fragrant flowers in May to June that attract butterflies.
 
Astra Blue Balloon Flower:  Compact, dwarf foliage with a bumper crop of 3" bright blue blooms from June through September that are as large as full-size cultivars.  This plant was bred for better branching, more blooms, richer flower color and thicker petals!  The common name is derived from the unique flower buds that puff up like balloons.
Astra Pink Improved Balloon Flower:  Compact, dwarf foliage with a bumper crop of 3" bright pink blooms from June through September that are as large as full-size cultivars.  This plant was bred for better branching, more blooms, richer flower color and thicker petals!  The common name is derived from the unique flower buds that puff up like balloons.
Cape Blanco Sedum:  Dense rosettes of brilliantly silver succulent foliage contrast nicely with the flat-topped clusters of yellow flowers in late spring to early summer.  Beautiful cascading over rock walls or nestled in small areas in rock gardens. 
Waterperry Blue Veronica:  Mats of pure green foliage feature tiny, lavender-blue flowers from May to June that rebloom.  With cooler weather the foliage becomes flushed with burgundy and copper tones.  Butterflies gather to drink the sweet nectar from the tranquil carpet of low, blue flowers.
Siberian Strawberry:  Strawberry-like trifoliate leaves are arranged in rosettes with pretty yellow flowers that bloom in branched clusters from May to June.  The vigorous mat-forming foliage is evergreen and even turns bronze in autumn.

 

 

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