 Maple-leaved Alumroot
Maple-leaved Alumroot
    or 
    Hairy Alumroot
    Heuchera villosa
    Heuchera villosa, sometimes commonly called hairy alum root,   is a species of coral bells that is native to rocky wooded slopes from Virginia   to Georgia and Tennessee. It is noted for its large, hairy, triangularly-lobed   (7-9 lobes), sharply-toothed, green leaves (to 5” across) that have a velvety   texture, its hairy, rusty-brown flowering stems and leaf stalks and its late   summer flowering (perhaps the latest in the genus). Leaves typically form a   rounded basal clump to 18-24” tall and as wide. Tiny, whitish to pinkish flowers   (to 1/4” wide) borne in open, airy panicles appear in late summer on slender,   wiry stems rising above the foliage mound to 36” tall. ‘Autumn Bride’ is a   cultivar that features velvety light green leaves. White flowers appear above   the foliage mound on slender stems in late summer to early fall.