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If they'll grow in a green roof, they'll grow in the hottest, windiest, driest gardens!

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Achillea millefolium 'Cassis' (red yarrow)
4.5" pot available for only: $4.95

Masses of attractive, intense cherry red flowers from June through September. Excellent border filler, mass planting sun-loving ground cover and cut flower. Hardy and low-maintenance, plants grow to 24" tall. Zone 4
Achillea ptarmica 'The Pearl' (white yarrow)
4.5" pot available for only: $4.95

Double white flowers are yet another yarrow variation available for the landscape. This one is an excellent substitute for baby's breath, with it's similar blooms but hardier growing characteristics. Grows 18-24" tall and wide. Full sun. Zone 3
Antennaria dioica (pussy toes)
4.5" pot available for only: $4.95

This native makes an excellent xeriscape subject for rock gardens, green roof plantings and other dry sites. Low, silvery foliage makes a beautiful mat and is topped with wine-red spring flowers. Prefers full sun, but will tolerate light shade given sharp drainage.
Arabis blepharophylla 'Spring Charm' (rock cress)
4.5" pot available for only: $4.95

Large rose-purple flowers in early spring open on dwarf plants that grow 4-9" tall. Excellent rock garden plants, they combine beautifully with assorted dianthus, armeria and creeping phlox for spring color.
Armeria maritima 'Alba' (white sea thrift)
4.5" pot available for only: $4.95

Pure white globes on stems 8-10" tall in early spring over low, grassy foliage. Nice little rock garden and green roof plants.
Armeria maritima 'Rubrifolia' (red leaved thrift)
4.5" pot available for only: $4.95

Masses of deep pink globes top stems 6-8" tall over low, grassy, dark purple foliage spring and into summer. Excellent rock garden plants, these drought tolerant perennials also make great green roof specimens. Looks great with golden Sedum rupestre 'Anjelina' and silver Cerastium tomentosum (snow in summer).
Buchloe dactyloides 'Legacy'®
98 plug tray $49.95

Drought tolerant, requires few mowings each summer to keep neat and trim. Can go dormant during excessive heat and drought, surviving long periods when water is unavailable, only to come back to life later! Plugs establish quickly, and can be planted after the last frost of spring and through the end of August. Plant one plug per square foot to establish a lawn in the first season. Price breaks available for quantities over 49 trays — call for quote.
Buchloe dactyloides 'SharpShooter'®
1 pound $16.95

Seed can be sown 2-3 pounds per 1000 square feet from May through August. Seed will germinate only when the soil temperature has warmed up to 80° or more. SharpShooter is adapted from Texas to the Dakotas. Plant SharpShooter for a water conserving, low-maintenance lawn.
Callirhoe involucrate (purple wine cups)
4.5" pot available for only: $4.95

Low-growing mounds of cut-leaves are covered with large, purple, cup-shaped flowers all summer. Can self-seed and spread once established. Grows in hideous clay soil, and heat and drought only slow its growth slightly! An excellent border plant and groundcover.
Cerastium tomentosum (snow-in-summer)
4.5" pot available for only: $4.95

Very low-growing groundcover thrives on poor soil and low moisture. Silvery foliage grows 2-3" high and is covered in 1" white flowers in summer. Excellent border or cascading edge, and a wonderful rock garden or green roof plant.
   
 

Come See Our Demonstration Green Roof

Green roofs are an ancient technology being reinterpreted into modern applications around the world. Many large cities are using green roofs to lessen the negative effects that so much man made surface materials are creating, including excessive heat build up in summer, poor air quality, water run off and storm drain overload, and shrinking habitat and an imbalanced ecosystem.

Green roofs clean and cool the air, filter rain water, slow run off, create habitat where once there was none and make attractive green space for the comfort and enjoyment of city inhabitants.

As if all that weren't enough, the environmental benefits extend to energy conservation, as well. The insulating value of green roofs surpass traditional roofing systems significantly enough to offset the extra initial cost of structural building. And the life of a green roof is much longer than typical roofs, conserving materials, easing use of limited landfill space and saving consumer labor costs.

Now that some major American cities have accepted green roofing as an idea whose time has come again, more residential consumers are beginning to look at green roofs as an excellent alternative for home use for many of the same reasons.

We liked the idea so much, we decided to try a small rooftop garden at the nursery to see how it works. Our roof will give us the opportunity to trial plants and other materials to help local builders and consumers who are interested in the technology find appropriate building materials, planting media and hardy plant material.

Drains allow rainwater to escape the roof structure. Copper pipe attached to the underside of the drains directs runoff to a rain barrel. The caging on the top is to prevent the rock from clogging the drain openings.

Doug mixes the planting media in a cement mixer, then fills tree buckets to load onto the tractor bucket to lift onto the rooftop (below).

 Be sure to visit
the nursery to see
the green roof
in person!

Doug moved 9,000 pounds of planting media onto the rooftop, being careful not to lift the erosion webbing (left).

Planting media was scooped into each cell of the erosion webbing (below). Each cell holds one plant.

Here's a photo detailing the foundation layers of the green roof. Once the structure was in place, Doug skinned the whole framework with particle board and roll roofing. He built a box around the entire roof perimeter using angle iron to attach 2x6 securely. Over this he put rubber roof liner, which was then protected by a layer of high density foam insulation panels. These panels are used primarily to protect the rubber roofing material, but will also provide some insulation to plant roots as an added bonus.

Over all of this goes the expandable ersosion webbing, which was used because the roof is sloped. This is being bolted to the top of the roof, then the panels are bolted together all along the edges of each section to hold them securely in place. This is the structure which holds the planting medium and plants in place.