Side-by-side plant comparison — which is right for your garden?
Lamprocapnos spectabilis
Papaveraceae · flowers
Magnolia grandiflora
Magnoliaceae · trees
Bleeding Heart (Zones 3-9)
Southern Magnolia (Zones 7-10)
Overlap: Both grow in zones 7–9
| Feature | Bleeding Heart | Southern Magnolia |
|---|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Lamprocapnos spectabilis | Magnolia grandiflora |
| Family | Papaveraceae | Magnoliaceae |
| Category | flowers | trees |
| Sun | ⛅ Part Shade | ☀️ Full Sun to Part Shade |
| Water | 💧💧 Medium | 💧💧 Medium |
| Soil | Rich, Moist | Rich, Well-drained, Acidic |
| Height | 3' | 80' |
| Spread | 2' | 40' |
| Bloom Season | Spring | Late Spring-Summer |
| Bloom Color | Pink, White | White |
| Growth Rate | Medium | Medium |
| Native Region | East Asia | Southeastern US |
| Maintenance | Low | Low |
Bleeding Heart
Southern Magnolia
Bleeding Heart
Southern Magnolia
Choose Bleeding Heart if you want a low-maintenance plant, and want deer resistance. It thrives in part shade with medium water in zones 3–9.
Choose Southern Magnolia if you want a low-maintenance plant, and want deer resistance. It thrives in full sun to part shade with medium water in zones 7–10.
Plant them together? Both overlap in zones 7–9. However, they have different sun needs, so plan your garden layout carefully.
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