Photo of Chamaelirium luteum flower by Eric Hunt

Photo by Eric Hunt

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Buy Chamaelirium luteum

Also Known As

  • Blazing Star
  • Devil's Bit
  • Fairy Wand
  • False Unicorn
  • Helonias
  • Rattlesnake Root
  • Squirrel Tails
  • Starwort

Plant type

perennial

size

  • H: 12"-24"
  • W: 6"

planting zones

  • 4a-9b

7 bare root plants ($11.50 ea) | $79.95

Shipping $7.95, free on orders $49.95 & up

1989 at Sunshine Farm and Gardens

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Chamaelirium luteum plant details

Chamaelirium luteum is a broadleaf deciduous perennial with green foliage. In spring white flowers emerge. Grows well with bright shade and regular water. Does well in average and well-drained soil.

CHARACTERISTICS OF Chamaelirium luteum

Plant type: perennial
Plant family: melanthiaceae
Foliage: deciduous green
Mature size: 6 IN wide, 12 IN - 24 IN - tall
Flowers: white blooms in spring
Uses: bare root shipping available, bottlebrush flowers, larger quantity available, naturalizing, woodland garden

GROWING CONDITIONS for Chamaelirium luteum

USDA Zones: 4a - 9b
Sun exposure: bright shade
Watering frequency: regular
Soil needs: average and well-drained

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Nursery contributed plant descriptions

Devil's Bit, Fairy Wand, False Unicorn. Sounds like a recipe for a witches brew doesn't it? Quite the contrary though. What we have here are 3 of the many Common Names of a remarkable, ornamental, native, shade tolerant garden plant that shows some very interesting promise as a medicinal plant.

Chamaelirium luteum, a member of the Lily family, is a dioecious plant (Male & Female flowers are produced on separate plants), that can be found growing in moist thickets in just about every state east of the Mississippi and in several Eastern Canadian provinces. It grows from a Trillium-like rhizome and flowers for quite an extended period of time in the early spring.

Unlike many spring flowering wildflowers, this plant is not ephemeral. In fact, the basal rosette of foliage that produces the central flower stems is present year round. Male plants attain heights of 24-30 inches in flower, but I've seen female plants soar to heights of over 48 inches. The small, creamy white flowers are produced in abundance on the stiff, firm, erect stems and it's no stretch of the imagination as to where the common name Fairy Wand comes from. Even the seed heads of this plant are attractive as is the foliage.

The name of the genus evolves from the Greek word Chamai, meaning dwarf and lirion meaning lily. Although in the wild you. ll find Chamaelirium luteum mostly in rich, moist soil, I've had great success growing it in average soils, even on weedy road banks, where I forgot that I had planted it and rediscovered the lost plants almost 10 years later. They hadn't grown much, but were still hanging on and very happy to be rescued and transplanted to a richer, continually weeded section of the garden. These plants have rewarded me for the positive move with multiple new rosettes and several flower stems year after year.

Although Devil's Bit has a wide range, it is rare to see a very large colony in one place; you usually find them scattered about. Native Americans used the roots of the plants medicinally for a host of ailments, mostly centered around menstruation. They believed that it also prevented miscarriages and improved fertility. Nowadays, modern medicinal research is bearing these uses out and investigation has shown that it may have beneficial properties for treating pregnancy problems and ovarian cysts. Other medicinal uses focus on Chamaelirium's anti-inflammatory and diuretic properties.

In the garden, Chamaelirium luteum makes an attractive statement along the front of a path or in a group setting and will be a welcome addition to any shade garden. Propagation is easy by rhizome division or by seed, although it can take 5-7 years for seed grown plants to reach maturity and flower.

Gardening facts about Chamaelirium luteum plant

How to Grow Chamaelirium luteum

  • Sun Exposure

    • bright shade
  • Water Needs

    • regular
  • Soil Needs

    • average
    • well-drained

Features

  • Foliage Color

    • green
  • Flower Color

    • white
  • Flower Season

    • spring
  • Foliage Season

    • deciduous
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