
Showy Wildlife Crimson Comet ButtonbushExcellent Flowering Display
White, Pom-Pom Blooms in Spring
Flowers Smell Like Honey
One of the Best Native Cultivars for Butterflies and Beneficial Pollinators
Fun Red Fruit Feeds Songbirds
Lush Foliage Provides Cover
Brilliant Red Fall Color
Thrives in Sun to Partial Shade
Great Screening Plant
Tolerates Wet Soil
Full Sun or Partial Shade
Can Be Kept in Large Containers for Many Years
Seldom Severely Damaged by Deer
How nice to rely on native shrubs in your garden design. Thoughtful choices are a boon for your local ecology, and modern cultivars deliver exceptional ornamental features.
A perfect example of this innovative trend is Crimson Comet Buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis ‘SMCBM’). This widely adaptable, bog tolerant shrub is truly an incredible native selection loaded with flowers and fruit for butterflies, bees and birds.
Start off your season with some of the cutest flowers you’ll ever see. Spherical, honey-scented, spiky little globes cover the mid-toned foliage.
They deliver plenty of nectar for local pollinators. So much, in fact, you should consider planting Buttonbush near your annual Victory Gardens to pump up your yields!
Multi-stemmed, informal shrubs grow to a great height and can be kept shorter if needed. Simply take out a few of the tallest stems in early spring, trimming them right down to the ground.
This selection blooms on new growth, so you and the honey bees will have plenty on hand. In fact, you might sneak a few for unforgettable indoor cut flower arrangements.
Because Crimson Comet Buttonbush tolerates “wet feet” in soil that stays damp, it is a great option for a planned Rain Garden. Use them in low-lying areas that are slow to dry out after rain, or near your downspout.
Like our plant experts say…choose the right plant for the right spot! Let Buttonbush grow into a showy screen at the back of a water feature.
Look closely and you’ll spy hummingbirds…there to sip nectar from the spring blooms. Hummingbirds also eat their share of tiny “no see ‘ums” that are enticed by the unusual flowers, too.
Lush growth gives birds lots of shelter. In fall, the blooms have morphed into showy, round red fruit. Each of these is simply loaded with seeds that native songbirds love to eat!
Even the foliage is pretty in fall! The lance-shaped leaves looked dipped in red rogue for welcome fall color.
Enliven your space with this top choice. Order Crimson Comet Buttonbush from our native shrub specialists today!