24-30" tall.
For those who want to be bathed in a softer glow as you orbit your garden. Whites, creamy light yellows and the slightest whiff of apricot-pink. This is a mix of pompon and cactus forms. Makes an elegant bouquet.
NEW!Orders with subtotals $1,200 and above receive bulk pricing.
If you have placed orders totaling at least $1,200 within the past 12 months, additional orders qualify for bulk pricing.
Bulbs begin shipping in late September.
Trees and plants begin shipping in March.
Potatoes and onion sets begin shipping in late March.
Seeds ship year-round.
Tools and growing supplies ship year-round.
Orders with subtotals $1,200 and above receive bulk pricing.
If you have placed orders totaling at least $1,200 within the past 12 months, additional orders qualify for bulk pricing.
For those who want to be bathed in a softer glow as you orbit your garden. Whites, creamy light yellows and the slightest whiff of apricot-pink. This is a mix of pompon and cactus forms. Makes an elegant bouquet.
NEW!Items from our perennial plants warehouse ordered on or before February 20 will ship from March through early May, starting with warmer areas and finishing in colder areas.
Orders placed after February 20 will ship from late April through early-to-mid May.
There’s a dahlia out there for you, even if you think you hate dahlias. If you’ve only seen the flashy lurid ones (no judgment) and you think that’s all there is, look again. A must-have for late summer and fall bouquets. So easy to grow that you cannot fail at them. Pompon-type dahlias have petite spheres of fully double blossoms that are nearly perfect in shape and form. Cactus types are pointy with space between the petals.
Native to hot parts of the Americas and first developed as a food crop, ornamental dahlias are descended from years of breeding and crossing D. pinnata and D. juarezi.
Spring-planted bulbs offer wonderful variety to the cutflower market and are a staple in old-fashioned gardens. The bulbs we offer here are (mostly) not hardy to northern winters. Smart and thrifty people lift and store them over the winter; the rest of us treat them as annuals.