Birds & Blooms

Top 10

The latest and greatest in the garden world have arrived.

- BY DEB WILEY

Best new plants for 2018

1 Onyx Red ornamental pepper

CAPSICUM ANNUUM ‘ONYX RED’, ANNUAL

Onyx Red ornamental pepper is a gorgeous 2018 All-america Selections winner in the flower—not vegetable—category.

Why we love it: The deep black foliage, dark fruits that turn bright red, and compact, bushy form (6-inch rounded mass in a pot, 10 inches in the ground) made this a standout in All-america Selections trials. Grow Onyx in full sun.

2 Pugster series butterfly bush

BUDDLEIA X HYBRIDS, ZONES 5 TO 9

The Pugster series of butterfly bushes grows full-sized flowers on plants that are only 2 feet tall but up to 4 feet wide. Thick stems and good branching make for better winter survival, but invasivene­ss may be an issue in some areas.

Why we love it: Like pug dogs, they’re short, stocky and cute! Choose from blue, periwinkle, pink or white.

3 Queeny Lime Orange zinnia

ZINNIA ELEGANS ‘QUEENY LIME ORANGE’, ANNUAL Two-inch dahlialike blooms in shades of lime, yellow, peach, salmon and orange turn light peach with a dark center as the flowers age. Add this 1½- to 2-foot-tall zinnia to your garden and watch people and pollinator­s go wild.

Why we love it: As a cut flower, this zinnia lasts more than a week without preservati­ves.

4 Prima Ginger coneflower

ECHINACEA PRIMA GINGER ‘TNECHPG’, ZONES 4 TO 10

This cute orange coneflower is so compact it will grow well in containers. Flowers reach 16 inches tall, and the leaves spread to about 15 inches. Even in its first year, you can expect multiple soft orange blooms that age to pink.

Why we love it: Finches and other birds love the dried seedheads.

5 Rockin’ Deep Purple salvia

SALVIA HYBRID ‘BBSAL09001’, PERENNIAL IN ZONES 10 TO 11, ANNUAL ELSEWHERE

This salvia is so pretty and easy you’ll want to grow it year after year. Because it never sets seed, the electric purple blooms just keep coming, and they fall off on their own when spent. If you want a bushier plant, clip off the ends to force more branching. Plant it in full to part sun.

Why we love it: Four words: hummingbir­d magnet, deer resistant.

6 Solartower Lime sweet potato vine

IPOMOEA BATATAS ‘BALSOTOWIM­E’, PERENNIAL IN ZONE 11, ANNUAL ELSEWHERE Sweet potato vines have long been a great choice to trail down containers or ramble through a bed. Solartower is the first self-climbing variety that can grow on a trellis or wall or be shaped as topiary. It reaches 4 to 7 feet long and performs best in full sun.

Why we love it: You can interweave it with Solartower Black.

7 Sky’s Edge scutellari­a

SCUTELLARI­A SCORDIFOLI­A ‘PAT HAYWARD’, ZONES 5 TO 10

If you have a rock garden or soil that drains rapidly and your landscape has sunny, moderate to dry conditions, look to Sky’s Edge scutellari­a, a 2018 Plant Select award winner chosen for its hardiness, long bloom time and seasonlong glossy green foliage.

Why we love it: It features a hard-to-find flower color—intense violet-blue. Plus it attracts bees and butterflie­s.

8 Bee-you series bee balm

MONARDA, ZONES 5 TO 9 Hummingbir­ds and butterflie­s duke it out with bees for the nectar in this bee balm. The Bee-you series plants are compact—15 to 18 inches tall, 12 to 15 inches wide—and mildew resistant.

Why we love it: Plants in the series have super cute names: Bee-lieve (soft pink), Bee-happy (vermillion red), Beefree (electric purple) and Bee-merry (coral pink).

9 Purple Prince alternanth­era

ALTERNANTH­ERA BRASILIANA ‘PURPLE PRINCE’, PERENNIAL IN ZONE 11, ANNUAL ELSEWHERE Burgundy-purple leaves with ruby-rose undersides coordinate with most things in your garden. The mounded, spreading, low-maintenanc­e grower keeps its color best in full to part sun.

Why we love it: This gorgeous foliage reaches at least 10 to 16 inches tall and about 18 to 20 inches wide. The compact size works well in containers.

10 Cosmic Candy Chick Charms red cobweb hens-and-chicks

SEMPERVIVU­M, ZONES 4 TO 8

This unusual—and vigorous—cobweb sempervivu­m stays red all year. Beware: It can’t tolerate the heat and humidity of Zones 9 to 11.

Why we love it: Nearly 99 percent of all cobweb sempervivu­m types have green leaves with silver hairs, but Cosmic Candy sports red leaves with silver hairs.

 ??  ?? MAJOR IMPACT With black foliage and red fruits, Onyx Red stands out. One All-america Selections judge said it offers “realWOW power in the landscape.”
MAJOR IMPACT With black foliage and red fruits, Onyx Red stands out. One All-america Selections judge said it offers “realWOW power in the landscape.”
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