801 E 5th Street – Suite 2, Canton, SD 57013 | Office Phone: 605-987-4332 | Email:Sean.Newberg@sd.nacdnet.net
For more information about the plant, please click on the image.
There is a minimum order of five (5) for each species.
Pinkish late April flowers, hairy inedible fruit, medium green foliage
White flowers, yellow to reddish-purple fall color, bright blue fruit
Attractive white flowers, glossy foliage, and edible black berries
Silver leaves with small red edible fruit, good for jelly
Drought hardy, fine leafed, yellow flowers, non-edible pods
Fuzzy leaves, showy flowers, red fruit good for making jam
Glossy silver-green leaves, suckers, white flowers in spring and purple fruit good for jelly
White flowers, blooms late April, fruit used for jams
Red leafed selection of common chokecherry, white flowers, fruit used for jams
Bluegreen leaves with whitish underside, attractive small red inedible fruits
Lustrous green leaves and dark inedible black berries, excellent hedge plant
Attractive white flowers, red fruit good for jelly, excellent fall color
Small shrub for moist, shaded flood plains, edible fruits used by birds and animals
Small thickets, white flowers, inedible white fruit eaten by songbirds, grows in woody areas
Red stems provide good winter color, tolerates wetter soils, white flowers
Similar to Gray Dogwood but more drought tolerant, white flowers and berries
Native, colony forming shrub, produces edible nuts
Fragrant white, pink, or red flowers, inedible red or orange fruit attracts birds, hardy and adaptable
Dense suckering growth, white to mostly purple flowers
Non-suckering growth, pale purple flowers, drought hardy
White Lilac is similar in every respect to the common lilac except the flowers are white
White flowers, edible fruit, good for wildlife, good for jams
Similar to Native Plum, better fruit quality and size, red to yellow fruit up to 1.25″ diameter
Fragrant leaves, red fuzzy non-edible fruit
Outstanding red fall color, dark red seed head, grows best in moist well-drained soil
Ideal for moist soils, bark reddish-brown turning gray, suckers to form thicket
Useful for stabilizing banks along waterways, suckers and layers to form dense mats