VINES AND TRAILING PLANTS 
6 3 
NATIVE BULBS AND TUBERS 
Name 
Color 
Remarks 
Allium Helleri and Allium 
mutabile. 
Loose umbel of white and 
pink florets. 
Grassy foliage. 
Anemone decapetala (Wood 
Violets). 
Pale blue; grow under oaks 
and elms. 
Found in pockets of limestone 
rocks; good for rock gar¬ 
dens. 
Androstephium coerulurum 
(Wild Hyacinth). 
Light blue Daffodils; some¬ 
times pale violet; leaves 
longer than Camassias, but 
flowers taller-stemmed. 
A low plant; good for rock 
gardens. 
Betony (Pedicularis). 
Purplish-bronze flowers; deli¬ 
cate, fern-like foliage. 
Early Spring blooming; ex¬ 
cellent hillside plant. 
Callirhoe pedata (Poppy Mal¬ 
low). 
Cherry red or deep wine; 
poppy-like flowers; gay on 
hillsides. 
Prefers sunny location. 
Callirhoe Lineariloba. 
Pinkish Lilac or white. 
Trailing; withstands drought. 
Camassia Fraseri (False Hya¬ 
cinth). 
Pale violet or blue flowers; 
lovely in clumps. 
Found on well-drained slopes. 
Camassia hyacinthiana. 
Sky blue flowers. 
Clatonia virginica (Spring 
Beauty). 
Flowers in pink racemes. 
Found thriving where the 
Dogwood grows; Lady slip¬ 
pers might grow there too, 
if tried. 
Dodecantheon Meadia 
(Shooting Star) or Ameri¬ 
can Cyclamen. 
Rose white flowers. 
Grows with Spring Beauties. 
Dodecantheon albesceus. 
Lavender and rose flowers. 
Erythronium americana 
(Dogtoothed Violet). 
Yellow. 
Grows in shade. 
Erythronium albidium. 
White. 
Grows in shade. 
Erythronium coloratum. 
Rose-colored. 
Grows in shade. 
Liatris punctata (Blazing 
Star) or Gay Feather. 
Purple plumes on upright, 
tall spikes. 
Grows well in dry, poor lo¬ 
cations, in sun. 
Viola missouriensis. 
Tufted, large, pale blue 
flowers. 
Viola Rafinesque (Hearts¬ 
ease). 
Tufted, darker, pansy-like, 
blue flowers. 
