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Purple Meadow Rue

Thalictrum dasycarpum

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Category
Forb / Wildflower
Sun
Full to Partial
Soil moisture
Medium-Wet to Medium
Bloom time
Jun–Jul
Bloom color
Cream

About Purple Meadow Rue

Purple Meadow Rue is a stately and architectural perennial that adds a sense of height and airy elegance to the summer garden. This impressive plant can reach heights of six feet or more, supported by sturdy, often purplish stems that branch gracefully at the top. Its delicate, blue-green foliage resembles that of a columbine or a maidenhair fern, providing a soft, textured backdrop for other plants. In June and July, it produces large, cloud-like clusters of creamy white flowers that lack petals but feature prominent, drooping stamens, giving them a unique, fringed appearance. Native to wet prairies, meadows, and woodland edges across much of North America, Purple Meadow Rue is a dioecious species, meaning individual plants are either male or female. It is a vital resource for native bees, which visit the male flowers for pollen, and it serves as a larval host for several species of moths. It thrives in full sun to partial shade and prefers rich, moist, well-drained soils. For best results, sow seeds in the fall to allow for natural cold stratification, or provide a 60-day cold-moist treatment before spring planting.

Native range

Native to 30 states:

AlabamaArkansasArizonaColoradoIowaIdahoIllinoisIndianaKansasKentuckyLouisianaMichiganMinnesotaMissouriMississippiMontanaNorth DakotaNebraskaNew MexicoNew YorkOhioOklahomaPennsylvaniaSouth DakotaTennesseeTexasUtahWashingtonWisconsinWyoming

County range map

BONAP county-level native range map for Thalictrum dasycarpum

Range map courtesy of BONAP (Biota of North America Program).

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