Nursery Located At Ruckman Road 25 
Calluna vulgaris Tib. Another one of our favorites that deserves a place in every garden. 
A 12 to 18 inch high mound of thin, dark green, arching twigs with long sprays of 
bright red-purple, small double flowers from July to December. 
Calluna vulgaris tomentosa. An attractive and outstanding shrub from 12 to 24 inches 
high, with woolly gray-green foliage and tall erect spikes of vivid bright purple 
flowers in July and August. 
CALOPOGON Grass Pink. (Orchidaceae, Orchid Family) 
Calopogon pulchellus. A delicate looking, but quite hardy and showy New Jersey native 
orchid that is easy to grow in the rock garden or bog garden. It has one or two 
long thin leaves and a tall slender flower stem about 10 inches high, bearing as 
many as eleven pretty orchids about 1% inches across. The color is a nice shade of 
orchid-pink and it has a long blooming season, from June to August. Its native 
habitat is a wet bog, therefore it is most easily grown in a bog garden, but it will 
succeed in a dryer rock garden if the soil is made up of acid peat moss and sand 
and is kept wet all summer. This is a tuberous species that should be plented in 
fall like other bulbs. (pH 4-5) 
CAMPANULA. Bellflower. (Campanulaceae, Bellflower Family) 
Campanula barbata. Low clusters of long narrow leaves about 4 inches high with erect 
flower stems 8 to 12 inches high, bearing large violet-blue flowers all summer, The 
inside of the flowers are hairy or bearded. It thrives in any garden soil in sun or 
light shade. Quite often this desirable plant is confused with the weedy C. 
rapunculoides. 
Campanula carpatica. (Tussock Bellflower) An old favorite in the Rock Garden that 
forms huge tussocks of large light green leaves and large upturned violet-blue cups 
on 8 to 12 inch stems from June to October. Valuable for its late blooming season. 
It thrives in ordinary garden soil in sun or light shade. (pH 6-8) 
Courtesy American. Rock Garden Society 
Campanula::carpatica ‘alba ° 
