The Wonderful Sulfur Buckwheats
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Jul 12, 2010 Ā· Revised on Oct 10, 2025
Knowing your location helps us recommend plants that will thrive in your climate, based on your Growing Zone.
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Jul 12, 2010 Ā· Revised on Oct 10, 2025
By David Salman, High Country Gardens Founder and Chief Horticulturist
TheĀ EriogonumĀ (pronounced eri-o-gonum) are a wonderfully beautiful and beneficial group of plants. Commonly known as the Sulfur Buckwheats, I have come to really rely on them to provide my gardens. Their long-lasting color and upright structure are a beautiful addition to garden designs, and they provide nectar and pollen for bees, butterflies, and beneficial insects.
My initial encounters with the genus many years ago has fostered an ever-growing appreciation for this large native genus. This plant expresses their greatest variety of forms in the western US, with Utah representing the epicenter ofĀ EriogonumĀ diversity.Ā As a hobbyist rock gardener, Iām thrilled to acquire an ever-growing collection of these miniature shrubs.
As ornamental perennials/subshrubs (small woody plants), they are dependable garden plants in terms of cold hardiness, ease of cultivation and reliable blooming with flowers that turn into attractive seed heads. The flowers and seed heads will often color the plants for a long season from early summer into fall.
Most are evergreen or semi-evergreen shrubs that have attractive foliage that is usually fuzzy, spoon-shaped, often gray or gray-green foliage. They are long-lived, getting more beautiful with each passing year. They are also easy-to-grow happiest when rooted into āleanā (infertile), well-drained soil in sunny, hot conditions.
As a xeric gardener and perennial enthusiast, I feel the Sulfur Buckwheats are the perfect companion for other favorite plants likeĀ LavenderĀ (Lavandula), Penstemon (or Beardtongues), cacti and succulents likeĀ Agave,Ā Yucca,Ā andĀ Hesperaloe,Ā and even South African beauties like Red Hot Poker (Kniphofia).
The larger growing varieties are wonderful companions for miniature and dwarf conifers (small growing pines, spruces, fir), and add wonderful splashes of color to conifer plantings. Yes, they are incredibly versatile.

I feel in general that the BuckwheatsĀ are woefully underutilized, both ornamentally and as important plants for providing habitat in the garden.Ā Eriogonum is a fantastic genus of wildflowers when it comes toĀ attracting and feeding bees and butterfliesĀ and many species of beneficial insects. Everyone should be planting to provide habitat for pollinators (butterflies, honey bees, bumblebees, and other native bees, and hummingbirds) as well as other insects and birds.Ā
EriogonumĀ are an essential bee plant as they are an outstanding nectar and pollen source for bees.Ā EriogonumĀ is also an important genus for attracting beneficial insects to protect the garden from aphids and other injurious insects. Beneficial insects prey on injurious insects like aphids, spider mites, and other garden pests, and contribute to a healthier garden - naturally.Ā
I'm not an ornithologist, but I suspect their grain-like seeds are also eaten by many bird species. Ā Ā

by David Salman
The Eriogonum (pronounced eri-ƶg- Ånum) are a wonderfully beautiful and useful group of plants. Commonly known as the Sulfur Buckwheats, I have come to really rely on them to provide my gardens with long-lasting color, structure and provide nectar and pollen for bees, butterflies and beneficial insects. My initial encounters with the genus many years ago has fostered an ever-growing appreciation for this large native genus that expresses their greatest variety of forms in the western US, with Utah representing the epicenter of Eriogonum diversity.
As a hobbyist rock gardener, Iām thrilled to acquire an ever-growing collection of these miniature shrubs.

As a xeric gardener and perennial enthusiast, the Sulfur Buckwheats are the perfect companion for other favorite plants like Lavender (Lavandula), beardtongues (Penstemon), cacti, succulents (like Agave, Yucca and Hesperaloe) and even South African beauties like Red Hot Poker (Kniphofia). The larger growing varieties are wonderful companions for miniature and dwarf conifers (small growing pines, spruces, fir) that add a wonderful splashes of color to conifer plantings. Yes, they are incredibly versatile.
Most are evergreen or semi-evergreen shrubs that have attractive foliage that is usually fuzzy, spoon-shaped, often gray or gray-green foliage. They are long-lived, getting more beautiful with each passing year. They are also easy-to-grow happiest when rooted into āleanā (infertile), well-drained soil in sunny, hot conditions.
Some of my recommended species and selections include E. umbellatum v. aureum āKanah Creekā a large, extremely floriferous yellow flowered variety originally found growing in western Colorado. Its flowers also age from yellow to shades of rusty-orange and orange-red. Iām also excitedly working on some new varieties for release in 2011. Eriogonum corymbosum āYellowā is a stupendous, ever-blooming yellow flowered variant of a species with normally cream-colored flowers. Native a limited area in central Utah, this desert native adapts easily to irrigated gardens in a variety of soil types.
So get some of these beauties into your gardens and stay tuned as there is much yet to come from this fabulous genus.
Text and Photos by Founder and Chief Horticulturist David Salman.
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