Chocolate Flower
Berlandiera lyrata
Fragrant in flower or leaf — site it where you'll catch it, spreading 1–2 ft; it blooms May through Sep.
- Full sun
- Dry
- 1–2 ft
- Blooms May–Sep
Native plants with scented flowers or foliage — the ones that make a garden smell as good as it looks. For Kansas, the right natives are shaped by Flint Hills & mixedgrass prairie and a continental, windy, semi-arid west climate. Every species below, from Chocolate Flower and Spotted Joe-Pye Weed to the rest of the list, is genuinely native to Kansas and the wider flora of the Great Plains and hardy through zones 5–7. Fragrance is easy to overlook on paper and unforgettable in person, so plant the scented natives where you will brush past them — along a path, by a door, beside a bench. Some carry it in the flowers and some in the crushed leaves, and many of the aromatic-leaved species double as deer-resistant. Site them in sun, where warmth lifts the scent into the air.
Each one native to your region and hardy in zones 5–7 · see this collection in other states.
Berlandiera lyrata
Fragrant in flower or leaf — site it where you'll catch it, spreading 1–2 ft; it blooms May through Sep.
Eutrochium maculatum
Worth a spot by a path or door for the scent, for clay and loam ground — it blooms Jul through Sep.
Monarda fistulosa
Worth a spot by a path or door for the scent, 1.5–2 ft wide — it blooms Jun through Aug.
Agastache foeniculum
Fragrant in flower or leaf — site it where you'll catch it, spreading 1.5–2 ft — it blooms Jun through Sep.
Asclepias incarnata
Carries a fragrance you'll want within reach, rose pink flowers, flowering as it flowers in Jul and Aug.
Sambucus canadensis
Scented enough to plant where you brush past it, creamy umbels flowers — it flowers in Jun and Jul.
Asclepias syriaca
Worth a spot by a path or door for the scent, cold-hardy to zone 3 — it flowers in Jun and Jul.
Asclepias speciosa
Fragrant in flower or leaf — site it where you'll catch it, good through zone 9, and it flowers in Jun and Jul.
Sporobolus heterolepis
Fragrant in flower or leaf — site it where you'll catch it, happy in sand, rocky, and loam soil.
Seed packets, plugs, and starter plants for many of these species ship to your door.
Browse on AmazonSome links here are affiliate links — we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. The surest source of locally-adapted stock is a native-plant nursery or a native plant society sale in your area.