Clematis pitcheri – Bluebill or Pitcher’s Leather Flower

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Native from Indiana to Nebraska south to New Mexico and Texas, with a prominent distribution in Illinois, Missouri and Kansas. We once were able to obtain Bluebill from a wholesale grower in Nebraska – unfortunately they have discontinued the plant. Fortunately, we have held on to a single plant keeping it in a container, occasionally obtaining seed. Fall of ’24 we decided to put the plant in the ground, next to a trellis, and hope to get consistent seed production moving forward. We may have a few plants in production but at this point the plant is priceless.

2026 update – the garden plant flowered profusely and we collected probably hundreds of seeds. Not sure how long it will take us to get seedlings to a sellable stage, but the plant is definitely in production.

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Description

Buttercup family (Ranunculaceae)

There are a number of quite attractive native species in the genus Clematis, most with pendant, bell-shaped flowers, many with “Leather Flower” in the common name, referring to the thick, colorful sepals of the flower – they have no petals which normally compose the colorful part of the flower! Why they are not more commonly available in horticulture is a bit of a mystery. True, the vines are never as covered in flowers as modern dinner-plate hybrids so they never put on an ostentatious show, but they possess a subtle charm and it’s always a pleasure to be surprised by their appearance in a garden.

The different species can be a bit of a challenge to tell apart, and flower form and color often varies considerably within species making it even more of a challenge. We’ve played around with a number of species over the years, but simply haven’t had as much time to devote to propagating them as we’d like. Seed sources are limited (again, why more native plant nurseries aren’t growing native clematis and/or offering seed is a bit of a mystery to us). The other challenge is that we suspect species hybridize – seeds obtained from nursery sources where a number of native clematis species may be growing in the same vicinity may have an uncertain degree of introgression from allospecific pollen sources. Collection of seeds from the wild would be best, but impractical for us because none of  the species grow wild near us. This would be less of a problem if the various native species had little intraspecific variation – hybrids would be fairly readily identifiable. But, as alluded to previously, native clematis show a wide range of variation in flower color and form, making it hard to determine when hybridization has occurred.

Updated 30 March 2026