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Aster nova-angliae 'Purple Dome' |
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![]() Click here to visit our Main Plant List page for current availability of this plant common name: New England aster flowering season: the end of summer into fall height: 18 inches Light requirements: full sun Soil requirements: average Water requirements: average Growth habit: grows as a slowly widening clump How to propagate: dividing in spring Leaf type: inch-long leaves Ways to use it: adds a rich color to the fall garden; colder weather and freezing nights don't slow this plant down until winter truly settles in Special characteristics: butterflies love the flowers of New England asters Other points of interests: asters grow so thickly and become so crowded that dividing them every few years is a big help to keeping them healthy and floriferous New England asters light up fall gardens. Although they are called New England asters, they are native to a much wider area from Alabama and Vermont, to Wyoming and New Mexico. This plant is much shorter than the usual aster, at a height of only eighteen inches. It would be a good additon to both the flower garden or for naturalizing in meadows, where it would be a great attraction for butterflies. And it is very tolerant of wet soil. Although perennial and long lived, we recommend frequent division, say every couple of years, keeping only the youngest most vigorous growth, to get the largest amount of flowers. The flowers of 'Purple Dome' are a very rich shade of this color. Combines well with many ornamental grasses, sedum, heuchera (coralbells) and penstemons. Very cold hardy to USDA Zone 3. |
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Sequim Rare Plants, 500 N. Sequim Ave., Sequim, WA 98382 USA - - (360) 775-1737 | ||
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