Siberian bugloss
Brunnera macrophylla
Siberian bugloss is a hardy, rhizomatous perennial native to the mountain forests of the Caucasus region (North Caucasus, Transcaucasus, and northeastern Turkey), grown for its heart-shaped, boldly textured leaves and delicate sprays of forget-me-not blue flowers in mid-spring. It excels as a groundcover in moist shade where little else blooms, and variegated cultivars like 'Jack Frost' extend its season interest through the foliage. The honest catch is moisture: this plant is genuinely intolerant of dry conditions and struggles badly in hot, humid summers — gardeners in the southeastern U.S. will find it declines quickly, and even in suitable zones a site that dries out in summer means foliage that scorches, wilts, and turns tatty before fall.
Climate fit: moderate (47/100)
Border
Filler
Pollinator
Light
Part shade
Water
Consistent moisture
Mature size
12-18" tall · 24" apart
Hardy in zones
3a-8b
brutally cold to frosty winters
Native in Illinois
No
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NC State Extension Gardener Plant Toolbox notes the flowers attract bees and other pollinators.
Cold hardiness
These values are location-based: this location's current hardiness is the baseline, and the 2050 value is a projected future climate for this same location.
Now
Zone 6b
Plotwright
USDA Zone 6b
-5°F to 0°F
Well-suited
Zone 7a
Plotwright
0°F to 5°F
Well-suited
In plain terms: This location has cold winters. Its winters are projected to keep warming through 2050.
✓
Well-suited today and still thriving in 2050.
Heat tolerance
Heat tolerance values are location-based too: heat days today are observed at this site, and the 2050 value projects this same location under a future climate.
Loading AHS heat-zone data for this location...
Where this plant fits
Suitable across 40 ecoregions — 35 climate-resilient through 2070 · 5 suited today. Best matches first.
Appalachian mixed mesophytic forests
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Appalachian-Blue Ridge forests
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Arizona Mountains forests
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Blue Mountains forests
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Canadian Aspen forests and parklands
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Central Pacific Northwest coastal forests
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Central Tallgrass prairie
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Central-Southern Cascades Forests
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Colorado Rockies forests
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Cross-Timbers savanna-woodland
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Similar plants
Browse lateral options with similar roles, light needs, size, or native-range overlap; these are not filtered for a better climate fit.
Epimedium grandiflorum
Barrenwort
Epimedium grandiflorum (large-flowered barrenwort, bishop's hat) is a deciduous woodland perennial native to Japan and Korea, valued for its delicate long-spurred spring flowers in pink, white, purple, or yellow and its copper-flushed heart-shaped foliage. It thrives in dappled shade under trees and shrubs, tolerates dry shade once established, and is rarely browsed by deer or rabbits. The honest catch is patience: it is genuinely slow to establish, spreading only modestly from its shallow rhizomes, and the early spring flowers are vulnerable to late frost damage — gardeners expecting quick ground cover are regularly disappointed in the first two to three seasons.
Geranium macrorrhizum
Bigroot geranium
A vigorous, semi-evergreen, clump- and colony-forming hardy geranium grown as one of the best groundcovers for dry shade under trees and shrubs. Its soft, deeply lobed, strongly aromatic leaves form a dense, weed-smothering carpet, many of them flushing red and bronze in autumn, and above the foliage rise loose clusters of magenta-pink (or white) flowers with prominent protruding stamens in late spring and early summer. It spreads steadily by thick surface rhizomes into a tough, low-maintenance, weed-proof mat that is easy to pull back and is not aggressively invasive. The aromatic foliage makes it markedly deer- and rabbit-resistant, and it is genuinely drought-tolerant once established. It is grown purely as an ornamental and is not a food plant.
Nepeta x faassenii
Catmint
A tough, aromatic garden hybrid (Nepeta racemosa x N. nepetella) that forms a low, spreading mound of scalloped gray-green leaves topped by raceme-like spikes of two-lipped lavender-blue flowers from late spring into fall. Sterile and clump-forming rather than weedy, it shrugs off heat, drought, and deer, draws bees all season, and is mildly attractive to cats — a workhorse for border fronts, edging, and dry sunny sites.
Campanula glomerata
Clustered bellflower
A sturdy, upright hardy perennial grown for the dense terminal heads — and tight axillary clusters — of upward- and outward-facing, deep violet-blue (sometimes white or purple) bell-shaped flowers it carries from early to midsummer above clumps of rough, oval basal leaves. POWO (Kew) gives its native range as a broad sweep of the temperate Northern Hemisphere from Britain across Europe and through temperate Asia to Japan and Korea (some 57 botanical countries), where it grows in dry grassland, scrub, and open woodland, often on chalky soils. It is one of the easiest border bellflowers: hardy in USDA zones 3a-8b and rated fully hardy (H7) by the RHS, which gives the rich-blue cultivar "Superba" and the pale "Caroline" its Award of Garden Merit. Plant it in full sun or light shade in ordinary, moisture-retentive soil and it will spread steadily by underground rhizomes to form a colony — vigorous and welcome in a relaxed border, but worth siting where it can run, or lifting and dividing to keep it in bounds. The open clusters are excellent for bees, worked above all by bumblebees. Sources give no edible use, so treat it as an ornamental only.
Viola sororia
Common blue violet
A low, clump-forming native woodland violet of eastern North America, grown for its early spring blue-to-purple flowers with conspicuous white throats held over glossy, heart-shaped leaves. It does not run, but self-seeds freely — to the point of being weedy in rich, moist ground. A larval host for fritillary butterflies and a nectar source for early bees and butterflies; the leaves are high in vitamins A and C.
Pulmonaria officinalis
Common Lungwort
Common lungwort is a low-growing, rhizomatous herbaceous perennial native to deciduous and beech-mixed woodlands of central and western Europe, from Belgium and the Netherlands east to the Caucasus (Wikipedia). Its white-spotted, heart-shaped leaves and early-spring flowers — opening pink then aging to blue-purple as petal pH shifts — make it one of the first-blooming shade groundcovers in the garden. It thrives beneath deciduous trees in humus-rich, consistently moist soil and is reliably hardy through zone 3. The honest catch: in heat, drought, or poor air circulation it collapses into disfiguring powdery mildew mid-summer, often leaving the foliage blackened and unsightly until new basal growth re-emerges — siting in cool, evenly moist shade with good airflow is not optional.
Educator packet
Plant packet
Siberian bugloss educator packet
Siberian bugloss is a hardy, rhizomatous perennial native to the mountain forests of the Caucasus region (North Caucasus, Transcaucasus, and northeastern Turkey), grown for its heart-shaped, boldly textured leaves and delicate sprays of forget-me-not blue flowers in mid-spring. It excels as a groundcover in moist shade where little else blooms, and variegated cultivars like 'Jack Frost' extend its season interest through the foliage. The honest catch is moisture: this plant is genuinely intolerant of dry conditions and struggles badly in hot, humid summers — gardeners in the southeastern U.S. will find it declines quickly, and even in suitable zones a site that dries out in summer means foliage that scorches, wilts, and turns tatty before fall.
Scientific name
Brunnera macrophylla
Plant type
perennial
Hardiness
3a-8b
Light
part-shade
Moisture
consistent
Spacing
24 inches
Classroom prompts
- Which plant traits are observations, and which are care recommendations?
- How would this plant fit change if the garden location moved warmer, colder, wetter, or drier?
- Which source-backed facts would you cite in a lesson handout?
Use the Sources & citations section below for page citation styles and the field-level source list.
Sources & citations
Cite this page
For lesson plans, articles, or research that uses this page. To cite a single upstream fact instead, use its specific source listed below.
Plotwright. (2026, May 17). Siberian bugloss (Brunnera macrophylla). Retrieved 2026, June 30, from https://plotwright.com/plants/brunnera-macrophylla
Sources for every fact
Every fact on this page traces to a source. 18 fields cited - 18 source-backed.
RHS Find a Plant
Botanical research database
Backs 17 fields
Identity
Summary
Plant type
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Moisture
Hardiness
Heat zone
Size
Spacing
Habit
Design roles
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Wikimedia Commons
Photo · CC0 1.0 Universal (Public Domain Dedication)
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