Nodding Onion (Allium cernuum) 3-pack of pots
Can’t be shipped.
The beautiful nodding flowers of Nodding Onion look great when massed on the border of a garden or planted in a meadow. Early growing leaves provide a splash of green when most plants are still dormant and brown. Nodding Onion is an excellent plant for boulevards and sidewalk plantings because it stays short and doesn’t flop over, it’s very hardy, and it fills in areas by seeding itself.
Also available in 12-packs of plugs here
Details
Perennial
Sun: Full Sun, Part Shade
Moisture: Medium, Dry
Height: 18 inches
Blooms: July, Aug
Color: Pink
Spacing: 6-12″
Spreads: A good amount by seed
Zones: 3-8
Benefits: Pollinators, Deer Resistant
Design Tips
Nodding Onion is a great short plant for borders or anywhere in the garden. It’s a staple of many of our garden designs. The grass-like leaves start sprouting very early in the spring, providing green color when most plants are still brown and dormant. Nodding Onion (Allium cernuum) is versatile—even growing in clay, sandy or gravely soil. After a few years it starts to self-seed in the garden, but because its seed are heavy and round they mostly fall around the parent plant and don’t spread throughout the garden, unlike like a lot of self-seeding plants that blow all over.
Great native plant choice for the Minnesota Lawns to Legumes grant program!
Companion Plants
Pale Purple Coneflower
Prairie Dropseed
Butterfly Milkweed
Prairie Phlox
Purple Prairie Clover
Blue Grama Grass
Size: 3-pack of pots, each pot is 3" wide x 3" deep
These pots can’t be shipped — pickup only!
Can’t be shipped.
The beautiful nodding flowers of Nodding Onion look great when massed on the border of a garden or planted in a meadow. Early growing leaves provide a splash of green when most plants are still dormant and brown. Nodding Onion is an excellent plant for boulevards and sidewalk plantings because it stays short and doesn’t flop over, it’s very hardy, and it fills in areas by seeding itself.
Also available in 12-packs of plugs here
Details
Perennial
Sun: Full Sun, Part Shade
Moisture: Medium, Dry
Height: 18 inches
Blooms: July, Aug
Color: Pink
Spacing: 6-12″
Spreads: A good amount by seed
Zones: 3-8
Benefits: Pollinators, Deer Resistant
Design Tips
Nodding Onion is a great short plant for borders or anywhere in the garden. It’s a staple of many of our garden designs. The grass-like leaves start sprouting very early in the spring, providing green color when most plants are still brown and dormant. Nodding Onion (Allium cernuum) is versatile—even growing in clay, sandy or gravely soil. After a few years it starts to self-seed in the garden, but because its seed are heavy and round they mostly fall around the parent plant and don’t spread throughout the garden, unlike like a lot of self-seeding plants that blow all over.
Great native plant choice for the Minnesota Lawns to Legumes grant program!
Companion Plants
Pale Purple Coneflower
Prairie Dropseed
Butterfly Milkweed
Prairie Phlox
Purple Prairie Clover
Blue Grama Grass
Size: 3-pack of pots, each pot is 3" wide x 3" deep
These pots can’t be shipped — pickup only!
Can’t be shipped.
The beautiful nodding flowers of Nodding Onion look great when massed on the border of a garden or planted in a meadow. Early growing leaves provide a splash of green when most plants are still dormant and brown. Nodding Onion is an excellent plant for boulevards and sidewalk plantings because it stays short and doesn’t flop over, it’s very hardy, and it fills in areas by seeding itself.
Also available in 12-packs of plugs here
Details
Perennial
Sun: Full Sun, Part Shade
Moisture: Medium, Dry
Height: 18 inches
Blooms: July, Aug
Color: Pink
Spacing: 6-12″
Spreads: A good amount by seed
Zones: 3-8
Benefits: Pollinators, Deer Resistant
Design Tips
Nodding Onion is a great short plant for borders or anywhere in the garden. It’s a staple of many of our garden designs. The grass-like leaves start sprouting very early in the spring, providing green color when most plants are still brown and dormant. Nodding Onion (Allium cernuum) is versatile—even growing in clay, sandy or gravely soil. After a few years it starts to self-seed in the garden, but because its seed are heavy and round they mostly fall around the parent plant and don’t spread throughout the garden, unlike like a lot of self-seeding plants that blow all over.
Great native plant choice for the Minnesota Lawns to Legumes grant program!
Companion Plants
Pale Purple Coneflower
Prairie Dropseed
Butterfly Milkweed
Prairie Phlox
Purple Prairie Clover
Blue Grama Grass