NATIVE PLANTS
Explore our collection of native plants that are perfect for the spring season. From vibrant flowers to lush greenery, we have everything you need to create a blooming garden this spring.

Looking to create a garden space that is not only beautiful but supports the local environment? At Blooms_N_Thyme, we offer a variety of garden services to help bring your dream garden to life. We stock only the best native plants and pollinators to ensure that your garden not only looks great but supports your local ecosystem. Our team of experts is constantly learning and keeping up with the latest trends in the industry to provide you with the best possible product. For all your gardening needs, look no further than Blooms_N_Thyme.
Butterfly Weed
The butterfly weed (butterfly weed) is a flowering plant native to North America that has long held spiritual symbolism and meaning for many cultures. With its vibrant orange and yellow blooms that attract both butterflies and hummingbirds, this hardy prairie plant has served as a metaphor for transformation, hope, and new beginnings.
Coneflower
Coneflower (Echinacea) is native to prairies and open woodlands of North America. It is named for the spiny cone-shaped flower center encircled by slender petals in shades of pink, purple or white. Newer varieties come in single and double forms and new coneflower colors such as orange, green, peach and coral. The flower nectar feeds hummingbirds, bees and butterflies, while songbirds feast on the seeds through fall and winter.
Echinacea is known for its medicinal properties as well as ornamental value in the landscape. Echinacea plant makes a great addition to mixed borders, beds, cutting gardens, mass plantings, rock gardens and native landscapes. Plants are deer resistant and have few pests or diseases.
Iris versicolor has a deep blue to purple, rarely white flower. The spreading sepals have purple veins as they gradually narrow to a white base, with a pubescent, greenish yellow signal. Northern blue flag iris flowers in late spring on a compact two to four flowered inflorescence. The bluish-green leaves are wide arching, up to four feet long and arise from shallowly rooted, large, branching rhizomes forming clumps.
Iris versicolor is commonly found growing on lake shores, swamps, and wet meadows occasionally in shallow water.



