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Astilbe Pumila

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Astilbe Pumila

Lavender-purple plumes in late summer.

Astilbe Pumila brings soft lavender-purple flower plumes to the shade garden later in the season, extending Astilbe color into late summer and early fall. The upright plumes rise above compact mounds of fern-like foliage, adding movement, texture, and a cool-toned flower display where many shade perennials are grown mostly for leaves. This makes it especially useful for woodland edges, shaded walkways, moist borders, and layered plantings that need a fresh wave of color after spring and early summer flowers have faded.

A compact Astilbe with ground cover potential.

Unlike taller Astilbe varieties, Pumila stays low and spreads more readily over time, eventually forming a broader mat in favorable conditions. This makes it a practical choice for homeowners who want a flowering shade perennial that can help cover bare soil without becoming a tall focal plant. Use it near the front of borders, along path edges, beneath open-canopy trees, or in small drifts where its foliage can create a lush, planted look before the flower plumes appear.

Refined foliage for shade-garden texture.

The foliage of Astilbe Pumila has the finely cut, fern-like texture that makes Astilbe so valuable in shade design. Its mounding leaves pair beautifully with hostas, heuchera, ferns, carex, hellebores, brunnera, and Japanese forest grass, especially when you need contrast against broader or bolder leaves. In consistently moist soil, the foliage can remain attractive through much of the growing season, helping the planting feel full and finished even outside the bloom window.

Deer-resistant color with pollinator value.

Astilbe Pumila is considered deer-resistant and rabbit-resistant, which makes it a practical option for shaded landscapes with browsing pressure. The lavender-purple flower plumes also attract bees and other pollinators, adding activity to woodland-style gardens that are often designed around foliage and texture. It is a good fit for shaded outdoor living spaces, foundation beds, and woodland borders where homeowners want flowering interest without choosing plants that deer commonly target.

Best in moist soil, with better tolerance than many Astilbes.

Astilbe Pumila prefers moist, humusy, organically rich, well-drained soil and should not be allowed to dry out for long periods. As a Chinese Astilbe type, it is often noted for better tolerance of sun and short dry periods than many Astilbe hybrids, but it still performs best when the root zone stays cool and evenly moist. Add compost or leaf mold at planting and mulch lightly to conserve moisture, especially in warmer climates, sunnier exposures, or container plantings.

Lavender-purple plumes in late summer.

Astilbe Pumila brings soft lavender-purple flower plumes to the shade garden later in the season, extending Astilbe color into late summer and early fall. The upright plumes rise above compact mounds of fern-like foliage, adding movement, texture, and a cool-toned flower display where many shade perennials are grown mostly for leaves. This makes it especially useful for woodland edges, shaded walkways, moist borders, and layered plantings that need a fresh wave of color after spring and early summer flowers have faded.

A compact Astilbe with ground cover potential.

Unlike taller Astilbe varieties, Pumila stays low and spreads more readily over time, eventually forming a broader mat in favorable conditions. This makes it a practical choice for homeowners who want a flowering shade perennial that can help cover bare soil without becoming a tall focal plant. Use it near the front of borders, along path edges, beneath open-canopy trees, or in small drifts where its foliage can create a lush, planted look before the flower plumes appear.

Refined foliage for shade-garden texture.

The foliage of Astilbe Pumila has the finely cut, fern-like texture that makes Astilbe so valuable in shade design. Its mounding leaves pair beautifully with hostas, heuchera, ferns, carex, hellebores, brunnera, and Japanese forest grass, especially when you need contrast against broader or bolder leaves. In consistently moist soil, the foliage can remain attractive through much of the growing season, helping the planting feel full and finished even outside the bloom window.

Deer-resistant color with pollinator value.

Astilbe Pumila is considered deer-resistant and rabbit-resistant, which makes it a practical option for shaded landscapes with browsing pressure. The lavender-purple flower plumes also attract bees and other pollinators, adding activity to woodland-style gardens that are often designed around foliage and texture. It is a good fit for shaded outdoor living spaces, foundation beds, and woodland borders where homeowners want flowering interest without choosing plants that deer commonly target.

Best in moist soil, with better tolerance than many Astilbes.

Astilbe Pumila prefers moist, humusy, organically rich, well-drained soil and should not be allowed to dry out for long periods. As a Chinese Astilbe type, it is often noted for better tolerance of sun and short dry periods than many Astilbe hybrids, but it still performs best when the root zone stays cool and evenly moist. Add compost or leaf mold at planting and mulch lightly to conserve moisture, especially in warmer climates, sunnier exposures, or container plantings.

$27.95
Astilbe Pumila
$27.95

Description

Lavender-purple plumes in late summer.

Astilbe Pumila brings soft lavender-purple flower plumes to the shade garden later in the season, extending Astilbe color into late summer and early fall. The upright plumes rise above compact mounds of fern-like foliage, adding movement, texture, and a cool-toned flower display where many shade perennials are grown mostly for leaves. This makes it especially useful for woodland edges, shaded walkways, moist borders, and layered plantings that need a fresh wave of color after spring and early summer flowers have faded.

A compact Astilbe with ground cover potential.

Unlike taller Astilbe varieties, Pumila stays low and spreads more readily over time, eventually forming a broader mat in favorable conditions. This makes it a practical choice for homeowners who want a flowering shade perennial that can help cover bare soil without becoming a tall focal plant. Use it near the front of borders, along path edges, beneath open-canopy trees, or in small drifts where its foliage can create a lush, planted look before the flower plumes appear.

Refined foliage for shade-garden texture.

The foliage of Astilbe Pumila has the finely cut, fern-like texture that makes Astilbe so valuable in shade design. Its mounding leaves pair beautifully with hostas, heuchera, ferns, carex, hellebores, brunnera, and Japanese forest grass, especially when you need contrast against broader or bolder leaves. In consistently moist soil, the foliage can remain attractive through much of the growing season, helping the planting feel full and finished even outside the bloom window.

Deer-resistant color with pollinator value.

Astilbe Pumila is considered deer-resistant and rabbit-resistant, which makes it a practical option for shaded landscapes with browsing pressure. The lavender-purple flower plumes also attract bees and other pollinators, adding activity to woodland-style gardens that are often designed around foliage and texture. It is a good fit for shaded outdoor living spaces, foundation beds, and woodland borders where homeowners want flowering interest without choosing plants that deer commonly target.

Best in moist soil, with better tolerance than many Astilbes.

Astilbe Pumila prefers moist, humusy, organically rich, well-drained soil and should not be allowed to dry out for long periods. As a Chinese Astilbe type, it is often noted for better tolerance of sun and short dry periods than many Astilbe hybrids, but it still performs best when the root zone stays cool and evenly moist. Add compost or leaf mold at planting and mulch lightly to conserve moisture, especially in warmer climates, sunnier exposures, or container plantings.