Clarkia unguiculata ‘Wild Form’
$7.30
We do not take online orders for plants. Please come in to the nursery, call or email: (510) 234-2222 or sales@thewatershednursery.com
Share this page
Wild Mountain Garland
Wild Mountain Garland is the wild grown form of Clarkia unguiculata, with pale to bright pink to lavender to white petals atop 2 – 5 ft. tall stalks, making it the tallest of the Clarkia species. Spreads up to 3 ft. wide.
This form has larger blossoms more wide spread along the stem, and bloom continuously from mid-summer to early fall, as new blossoms open at the top while older blossoms at the base of the flower stalk go to seed. They are a bee magnet and are one of the longest-lived cut flowers, lasting over a month in a vase!
Perfect companion plant for chaparral shrubs, pollinator gardens, oak understories, and fits beautifully in back borders mixed in with lower growing flowers.
Lifeform: Annual
Sun: Full Sun, Part Shade
Other: Attracts Bees, Attracts Butterflies, Attracts Moths, Drought Tolerant
Container | 4", D-16 |
---|---|
Ecological Value | Larval host plant of the Day-flying Clark's Sprink Hawkmoth (Proserpinus clarkiae)., Nectar source for bees and several species of day-flying hawk moths. |
Historical Uses | Miwok peoples parch and pulverize seeds to eat dry with acorn mush. |
Distribution | Endemic to California |
Elevation | 7" – 11310" |
Communities | Chaparral, Coastal Strand, Foothill Woodland, Valley Grassland |
Habitat | Woodlands |