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Butterfly Weed

Asclepias tuberosa

Regular price $7.99
Sale price $7.99 Regular price $9.99
per Plant - 2.5" Pot
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ZONES  4-9 | Good to grow! Zone
Choose a Size: Plant - 2.5" Pot
Regular price $7.99
Sale price $7.99 Regular price $9.99
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Amount: Plant - 2.5" Pot
Regular price $7.99
Sale price $7.99 Regular price $9.99
Regular price $11.99
Sale price $11.99 Regular price $0.00
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Butterfly Weed (Asclepias tuberosa) is a must-have for the pollinator garden with clusters of bright orange flowers in summer. This native wildflower is easy to grow, cold hardy, and does well in poor, dry soils. Asclepias is an important nectar source for Monarch butterflies and the sole host plant for Monarch caterpillars. Drought resistant/drought tolerant (xeric).

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Overall rating: 4.8 / 5 from 5 reviews.

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Review topics: ["size","plant","milkweed","growth"].

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Reviews

Gorgeous!

"We ordered tubers during COVID (2020/2021) and they arrived completely dried up and shriveled. I had ZERO faith that anything would pop out of the tuber. 4 years later we have a gorgeous HUGE display or brilliant orange blossoms. The seeds from the pods have volunteered in other beds and landscaped areas. I have started some plants indoors from harvested seeds. If you are planting this in an irrigated location, just make sure you leave enough room as the plants get huge. This summer, we had two rounds of blossoms!"

Berkeley P. (5/5)

Healthy and Strong!

"Two of three plants survived and are thriving. They are very slow growers, but they grow steadily and are sure to be lovely once they reach flowering. This has been my most successful purchase of butterfly weed and I am very happy. I plan to purchase more. I reccommend this grower for this particular plant."

MISS H. (5/5)

Monarch habitat

"I plant several varieties of milkweed for the monarchs my tallest milkweed is about 8 foot tall and very hearty"

Dorothy (4/5)

Great plants!!!

"Used the plant in a native butterfly garden. Butterfly weed is hard to transplant and move with the tap root. But HCG had healthy potted plants and were easy to transplant and grow."

Dan (5/5)

Why aren't more folks raving about this plant?

"I am very surprised this is the first review of Asclepias tuberosa. When I received my plants in great health, they immediately exhibited vigorous growth, & bloomed in year one. In spring of season 2, I thought I'd lost all of them as nothing was emerging. About the time I sighed heavy sighs & was thinking of replacing them, I brushed aside some leaves from their planting site & each & every plant was pushing green shoots through the ground. I'm not a great gardener, so I like to plant plants that are tough, don't need pampering, and that will last a long time filling their ornamental space. Asclepias tuberosa does all those things and more. I've planted seven of these plants on my property, & lost only one, most likely because I planted in a too shady, too wet area. Every other plant is emerging with vigor & passion, & I expect strong blooms again this season, just as I have the past three. In the photos from 2020, you can see for yourself the incredible color and density of the plants. Colorado can be brutal on gardens & gardeners. It can freeze in late April (as it did for a week solid the same season I took these photos), & the site I planted these is super harsh -- little morning sun & plants have to endure the hottest exposure of the day from ~11:00 a. m. to 6:30 p. m. These are planted in a large bed next to our streetside driveway. My neighbors can't believe they bloom from June until nearly the end of July. They are fullest in mid to late June, right after most of my spring bloomers are long finished. They absolutely explode in rich pops of orange flowers contrasted against dense bushy dark green foliage. It's currently late May, & the plants are already one third their usual blooming size,giving every indication they'll be just as efflorescent this year. I'm now seeing volunteer plants, probably from roots, and I intend on keeping them all. We fertilize with liquid 20-20-20 once every two weeks, half strength. Probably too much, but look at 'em!"

David W. (5/5)

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