Bastard Toadflax (Comandra umbellata) 3-pack of pots

$45.00
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Bastard Toadflax (Comandra umbellata) is a rare and important prairie plant. It grows no more than 12 inches high and has white flowers on small stems. It is semi-parasitic and attaches its roots to the roots of a host plant to get nutrients and water. We grow Bastard Toadflax with Blue Grama Grass as a host plant because it is short and won’t overwhelm it. It also spreads underground to create large colonies over time—not a solid ground cover or one that eliminates other plants, but one that weaves itself within the flowers and grasses of the prairie. It is thought that the parasitic nature of Bastard Toadflax helps reduce the vigor of taller, more aggressive prairie species to help rarer and shorter prairie plants thrive in the bottom layer. You can often find Bastard Toadflax growing with other rare prairie species such as Hoary Puccoon, Yellow Star Grass, and Prairie Phlox.

Details

Perennial
Sun:    
Full Sun, Part Shade
Moisture:    Dry, Medium-Dry, Medium
Height:    6-12 inches
Blooms:    May, June, July
Color:    White
Spacing:    12-24”
Spreads: A little underground
Zones:    3-8
Benefits:    Pollinators

Design Tips

Bastard Toadflax (Comandra umbellata) is a semi-parasitic plant and needs to be planted with a host plant, which is included in each pot. It is very short and grows well with other plants. It spreads slowly underground each year. Plant it with other short companion plants such as Hoary Puccoon, Yellow Star Grass, Prairie Phlox, and Butterfly Milkweed.

Maintenance Tips

Bastard Toadflax is pretty easy to garden with—it is so short that it never needs to be trimmed. Although it spreads underground, it doesn’t spread densely and never crowds out other plants.

Great native plant choice for the Minnesota Lawns to Legumes grant program!

Companion Plants

Hoary Puccoon
Butterfly Milkweed
Prairie Phlox
Yellow Star Grass
Wood Betony

Size: 3-pack of pots, each pot is 3" wide x 3" deep

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Can’t be shipped.

Bastard Toadflax (Comandra umbellata) is a rare and important prairie plant. It grows no more than 12 inches high and has white flowers on small stems. It is semi-parasitic and attaches its roots to the roots of a host plant to get nutrients and water. We grow Bastard Toadflax with Blue Grama Grass as a host plant because it is short and won’t overwhelm it. It also spreads underground to create large colonies over time—not a solid ground cover or one that eliminates other plants, but one that weaves itself within the flowers and grasses of the prairie. It is thought that the parasitic nature of Bastard Toadflax helps reduce the vigor of taller, more aggressive prairie species to help rarer and shorter prairie plants thrive in the bottom layer. You can often find Bastard Toadflax growing with other rare prairie species such as Hoary Puccoon, Yellow Star Grass, and Prairie Phlox.

Details

Perennial
Sun:    
Full Sun, Part Shade
Moisture:    Dry, Medium-Dry, Medium
Height:    6-12 inches
Blooms:    May, June, July
Color:    White
Spacing:    12-24”
Spreads: A little underground
Zones:    3-8
Benefits:    Pollinators

Design Tips

Bastard Toadflax (Comandra umbellata) is a semi-parasitic plant and needs to be planted with a host plant, which is included in each pot. It is very short and grows well with other plants. It spreads slowly underground each year. Plant it with other short companion plants such as Hoary Puccoon, Yellow Star Grass, Prairie Phlox, and Butterfly Milkweed.

Maintenance Tips

Bastard Toadflax is pretty easy to garden with—it is so short that it never needs to be trimmed. Although it spreads underground, it doesn’t spread densely and never crowds out other plants.

Great native plant choice for the Minnesota Lawns to Legumes grant program!

Companion Plants

Hoary Puccoon
Butterfly Milkweed
Prairie Phlox
Yellow Star Grass
Wood Betony

Size: 3-pack of pots, each pot is 3" wide x 3" deep