a genus containing eight species of herbaceous flowering perennial plants with unique, "heart"-shaped flowers and finely divided foliage.
People also ask
Where is the best place to plant a bleeding heart?
Do bleeding hearts come back every year?
Is bleeding heart toxic to humans?
Do bleeding hearts spread?
Dicentra are hardy perennials and will flower for many years without dividing. If it's necessary to move a plant, do so in early spring while the plant is still ...
Dicentra spectabilis, native to eastern Asia (northern China, Korea and Japan), won't start blooming until late spring.
21
Bleeding Heart thrives in partial to full shade, although flowering is best with morning sun and afternoon shade. Consistent watering is best for all.
Dicentra cucullaria, commonly called Dutchman's breeches, is an easily recognized, graceful, early spring, Missouri native wildflower which typically occurs on ...
Dicentra
Plant
Dicentra, known collectively as the bleeding-hearts, is a genus containing eight species of herbaceous flowering perennial plants with unique, "heart"-shaped flowers and finely divided foliage. The species are, primarily, native to North America,... Wikipedia
Family: Papaveraceae
Scientific name: Dicentra
Hardiness zone: Zones 3-9
Genus: Dicentra; Bernh.
Kingdom: Plantae
Lower classifications
Show more
Show less
See results about
Dicentras are deciduous perennials that thrive in rich, well-drained soil in full to partial shade and regular water in the summer months.
Dicentra (Bleeding Heart) are rhizomatous or tuberous perennials with heart-shaped flowers dangling in arching panicles or racemes above attractively divided ...
Plant in partial to full shade in rich well-draining moist soils. Tolerant of the deepest shade these plants resemble ferns with their deeply divided lacey ...
Dicentra eximia, commonly called fringed bleeding heart, is a native wildflower of the eastern United States that typically occurs on forest floors, rocky woods ...
Dicentra eximia is a mounding evergreen wildflower. Leaves are bluish green and compound with a delicate ferny demeanor.