Bleeding heart has attractive mounded foliage with arching stems of delicate, heart-shaped flowers in spring. It thrives in moist woodland gardens along with ferns and other shade-lovers. They are deer resistant and this is the old fashioned variety favored for cottage gardens that has pink hearts and white teardrops falling from them. The plant is ephemeral which means that the foliage will die back after they flower and reappear the next spring. You may notice seedlings; transplant them to a desired spot.
$7.00Tag: White Page 4 of 5

I would not be without this fabulous herb. It’s a must for anyone who loves of garlic. They are great in salads, stir fries, eggs, with vegetables and especially in Asian inspired soups. Sometimes the plant is called Chinese chives or leeks. The leaves are best when harvested young. They are flat rather than round like regular chives. The white flowers are also edible and add a subtle garlic flavor to salads. They bloom later in summer than a standard chive. The seeds can be used for sprouting, another delicious salad additive that you can save for winter, when the flowers are no longer available. They to self-sow readily so be sure to cut the seed heads before the seeds fall if you start to get too many. I keep this beauty in my white garden. They flower all the way until frost, when not much else is blooming. The bees and butterflies love them too. They draw the pollinators to the garden like a magnet. I’d have them for this reason alone. These plants are super low maintenance. The only thing I do to them is remove the dead foliage in spring and cut off the seed heads to prevent over production.
- Garlic Chives allium tuberosum

By Lenington – 1969
This near white is actually the shade of really pale yellow that really stands out in the moon garden, and because they are fairly tall at 30”, with 5 ½” flowers, they look like glowing orbs in the twilight. They are mid-season bloomers extending well into the late season. This semi-evergreen diploid also has fragrance.
Parentage: seedling x white formal.
$10.00
By Shooter – 1997
Martha is a gorgeous ruffled cream, with a slight pink tint above an apple green throat. At 32 inches tall it sports 6 inch flowers that start mid-season and then they re-bloom. She is a semi-evergreen diploid with this parentage (Quilted Lace × Lazy Hill).
$9.00