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Carolina Allspice Seeds | Carolina Sweetshrub | (Calycanthus floridus)

Carolina Allspice Seeds | Carolina Sweetshrub | (Calycanthus floridus)

Burgundy flowers that smell like strawberries and spice. The native shrub that surprises everyone.

Calycanthus floridus, the Carolina Allspice or Carolina Sweetshrub, produces one of the most unusual and fragrant flowers of any native shrub in eastern North America, deep burgundy-red to maroon blooms with strap-like petals arranged in a swirled pattern that emerges from the leaf axils in late spring and early summer and releases a complex, intensely sweet fragrance combining strawberry, spice, and banana that stops people in their tracks and causes them to look around in confusion before they trace the scent to its source. The flower fragrance is so distinctive and so pleasant that the shrub has been grown in American gardens since colonial times, appearing in virtually every documented historic garden from the 18th century onward. It grows in full sun or partial shade, tolerates a wide range of soils, and develops into a dense, rounded shrub with large, aromatic dark green leaves that release a spicy fragrance when crushed. If you are looking to buy Carolina Allspice seeds or grow this native sweetshrub from seed, this is the shrub whose fragrance alone justifies growing it.

  • Deep burgundy-red flowers with strap-like petals releasing an intense strawberry-spice fragrance in late spring
  • The fragrance is complex and powerful, often described as the best flower fragrance of any eastern native shrub
  • Native to the southeastern United States, adaptable to full sun and partial shade across a wide range of soils
  • Aromatic foliage releasing a spicy scent when crushed, providing additional fragrance interest through the season
  • Dense, rounded form providing good garden structure with attractive large dark green leaves through summer

Things you probably did not know about the Carolina Allspice

The flower fragrance comes from a different volatile compound mixture than any other fragrant native shrub. The distinctive scent of Carolina Allspice flowers is produced by a combination of volatile compounds including cinnamaldehyde, eugenol, and various esters that create the spicy, fruity, complex fragrance impossible to categorize as simply floral or fruity or spicy. The scent has been compared to strawberries, red wine, cantaloupe, pineapple, and cloves simultaneously by different people experiencing it for the first time, reflecting the genuinely complex mixture of aromatic compounds that produce it.

Thomas Jefferson grew it at Monticello and considered it one of the finest native shrubs. Jefferson's garden notes at Monticello document Carolina Allspice planted in prominent positions in the ornamental garden, reflecting its status as one of the most valued native ornamental shrubs among educated American gardeners of the 18th century. Jefferson, who was deeply interested in documenting the ornamental potential of American native plants, placed Carolina Allspice alongside Eastern Redbud and other natives that he believed deserved wider cultivation in American and European gardens.

The flowers have a unique structure that temporarily traps small beetles as pollinators. Carolina Allspice flowers are pollinated primarily by small beetles that are temporarily trapped inside the flower chamber by inward-pointing hairs that prevent escape until the flower has released its pollen onto the beetle. Once the pollen is deposited, the hairs relax and the beetle escapes, carrying pollen to the next flower it visits. This beetle trap pollination mechanism is primitive and ancient, shared with magnolias and a small number of other plant families that evolved before bees became the dominant pollinators.

The fragrance intensity varies dramatically between individual seed-grown plants. Carolina Allspice fragrance is genetically variable, with some individuals producing an almost overwhelming spicy-sweet scent and others producing little to no detectable fragrance. This variation is well-documented and is the reason that serious buyers of Carolina Allspice are always advised to smell the plant before purchasing rather than selecting by appearance alone. Seed-grown plants express the full range of this fragrance variability, making seed growing a genuine discovery process.

Growing Details

  • Botanical Name: Calycanthus floridus
  • Stratification: Required, 60 to 90 days cold moist stratification
  • USDA Zones: 4 to 9
  • Soil: Adaptable, prefers moist, rich, slightly acidic soil but tolerates a range of conditions
  • Light: Full sun to full shade
  • Height: 6 to 12 feet
  • Spread: 6 to 12 feet
  • Growth Rate: Moderate, 1 to 2 feet per year

Plant it near a path, entrance, or seating area where the fragrance will be encountered regularly. When you find the individual with the most intense fragrance in a seed-grown batch you will know exactly which one to propagate and keep as a permanent garden resident.

FAQ

Do you pre-stratify the seeds?

Most of our seeds are not pre-stratified. We ship them unstratified so you can control germination timing based on your local growing season. We sell to all 50 U.S. states and Canadian provinces, and since each region has different planting windows, pre-stratifying would risk seeds germinating in transit or before you're ready to plant.

True stratification requires cold, moist conditions, which can lead to premature sprouting or mold if not timed properly. To avoid this, we store most seeds in dry cold conditions to preserve viability — but this does not initiate stratification.

Do any of your seeds need to stay moist? (Recalcitrant seeds)

Yes — some species we offer are recalcitrant, meaning they must remain moist to stay viable and cannot be dried out. Examples include: Chestnut, Hazelnut, Paw Paw, etc.

These seeds are shipped in moist cold storage and are clearly labeled on the product page when applicable. Please refrigerate immediately upon arrival and follow included care instructions.

Do you ship internationally?

We currently ship to the United States and Canada only. Unfortunately, we cannot ship to other countries without a phytosanitary certificate, which is required by most international customs agencies.

If you're interested in shipping outside North America, please contact us. Note that a phytosanitary certificate typically adds $60–$80 USD per seed type and must be arranged in advance.


Shipping & What's Included

Shipping & Packaging

Hand-packed in resealable zipper kraft paper seed bags

Stratification and planting instructions included with every order

1 free bonus seed pack included with every order

Ships within 3–5 business days via USPS

Return Policy


Due to the nature of our products, we do not accept returns on seeds.
However, if your order arrives damaged or incorrect, please contact us within 7 days and we’ll make it right.



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