Advanced Search Filters

Plant Type
Hardiness Zone
Heat Zone
Sunset Zone
Function
Sun Exposure
Soil Moisture
Water Requirement

Plants Matching dicentra

Returned 22 results. Page 1 of 3.

Image of Dicentra photo by: James H. Schutte

James H. Schutte

(Dicentra)

Image of Dicentra

Blooms of Bressingham

(Adrian Bloom Bleeding Heart, Hybrid Bleeding Heart)

(Burning Hearts Bleeding Heart, Hybrid Bleeding Heart)

Image of Dicentra canadensis photo by: Jesse Saylor

Jesse Saylor

(Squirrel Corn)

Lovely lacy blue-green foliage only appears in spring and summer on the woodland wildflower squirrel corn, and its pretty white flowers are mildly fragrant in mid-spring. An herbaceous perennial native to the moist woodlands of eastern North America, it grows from yellow pea pod-like tubers (modified stems). These tubers are readily dug up, eaten and replanted across the ground by chipmunks and squirrels.

The finely textured foliage is wedge-like but with thin and deep lobes. The leaves and stems...

Image of Dicentra

Yoder Brothers

(Candy Hearts Bleeding Heart, Hybrid Bleeding Heart)

Image of Dicentra cucullaria photo by: Gerald L. Klingaman

Gerald L. Klingaman

(Dutchman's Breeches)

Lovely lacy green foliage only appears in spring and summer on the woodland wildflower Dutchman's breeches, and its pretty white flowers add beauty in early spring. An herbaceous perennial native to the moist woodlands of east-central North America, it grows from scaly roots (modified stems).

The finely textured foliage is made up of two leaflets that are deeply lobed. The leaves and stems appear only in spring and summer. In early spring, a stem rises just above the foliage clump to reveal small...

Image of Dicentra eximia photo by: Mark A. Miller

Mark A. Miller

(Fringed Bleeding Heart)

Fringed bleeding heart is a wonderful herbaceous perennial native to the eastern United States. Starting in spring - and continuing all summer in cooler climes - clusters of dark pink, heart shaped flowers are displayed above the grayish-green fern-like foliage. Several excellent selections and hybrids are available, including the white-flowered 'Snowdrift'.

Fringed bleeding heart is happiest in a moist shady site, where it will self-sow and naturalize. Use it in a woodland or shady mixed border.

(Fringed Bleeding Heart, White Bleeding Heart)

Fringed bleeding heart is a wonderful herbaceous perennial native to the eastern United States. Starting in spring - and continuing all summer in cooler climes – this selection, ‘Alba,’ bears heart-shaped, pendent, white flowers in single file at the ends of slender, arching stems that overtop the deeply divided grayish-green, fern-like leaves, which gather in a mounded clump.

Like all fringed bleeding hearts, ‘Alba’ prefers moist, humus-rich soil and partial to full shade. When happy, it self-sows...

Image of Dicentra eximia

Blooms of Bressingham

(Fringed Bleeding Heart)

Fringed bleeding heart is a wonderful herbaceous perennial native to the eastern United States. Starting in spring - and continuing all summer in cooler climes - clusters of dark pink, heart shaped flowers are displayed above the grayish-green fern-like foliage. Several excellent selections and hybrids are available, including the white-flowered 'Snowdrift'.

Fringed bleeding heart is happiest in a moist shady site, where it will self-sow and naturalize. Use it in a woodland or shady mixed border.

Image of Dicentra formosa photo by: Maureen Gilmer

Maureen Gilmer

(Pacific Bleeding Heart, Western Bleeding Heart)

This species of dicentra is a low, spreading perennial prized for its feathery leaves and clusters of heart-shaped, pendent pink flowers held above the leaves on stems that curl like a shepherd’s crook. The plant spreads by rhizomes (underground stems) to form a soft mound, and the flowers bloom in late spring to early summer. It spreads freely by seeds. Native to western North America, it is found in a range of conditions, but most often in shady spots, including woodlands.

Plant this perennial...