« Previous Plant | Next Plant »
This plant actually becomes most visible in early autumn, when its brilliant red berries appear. Erect, hood-like spikes of flowers are green or purple on the outside, the inside is usually striped purple and greenish-white.
• | Slow |
• | Spring |
• | Green |
• | Container Plants |
Grows best in a loamy, peaty, well-drained soil, in shade or dappled sunlight. These native plants do not spread quickly. Seeds will germinate in the spring to form a single rounded leaf, and then take three years of growth before the plant is large enough to flower. Best left undisturbed when established. The juvenile seedling can sometimes be mistaken for poison ivy foliage.