Black Cohosh
Actaea racemosa
- Native perennial
- Shade garden
- Pollinator friendly
- Deer resistant
- Low maintenance
An upright native woodland perennial that sends tall, candle-like spires of fluffy white flowers high above attractive ferny foliage.
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Actaea racemosa — black cohosh, also called black snakeroot, bugbane, or fairy candles — is an upright rhizomatous perennial native to the woodlands of eastern North America. It grows to 6 feet or more, sending tall, candle-like spires of fluffy creamy-white flowers high above large, deeply divided, fern-like leaves.
Vertical accent
Black cohosh adds a striking vertical note to the back of a shady border, a cottage garden, or a woodland planting. The showy summer flowers are followed by interesting seedheads that are often used in arrangements. It’s a host plant for Spring Azure, Holly Blue, and Appalachian Azure butterflies, and is highly resistant to deer.
Care tips
Give it rich, moisture-retentive soil in partial to full shade with a couple of hours of morning sun, and shelter it from strong winds. It can be slow to establish, so be patient — and note that the flowers carry an unpleasant, medicinal scent up close.
Habitat & form
Where it's from and what to expect.
- Native range
- Eastern North America
- Plant type
- Perennial
- Mature size
- 4–7 ft tall and 2–4 ft wide.
- Bloom
- Tall racemes of hundreds of tiny, fluffy creamy-white flowers from early to late summer, followed by dry seed pods.
- Hardiness
- USDA zones 3–8.
Care
How to keep it happy.
- Sunlight
- Dappled to partial or deep shade; ideally 2–3 hours of morning sun. Too little light and it may not flower.
- Water
- Prefers rich, moisture-retentive soil that stays evenly moist.
- Soil
- Rich soil high in organic matter; acidic to neutral pH with good drainage.
- Pruning
- Maintenance: low — leave or remove the spent flower spikes as you like, then cut the foliage back after frost. It resents disturbance, so divide only occasionally to renew.