Coseytown Flowers ยท Greencastle, Pennsylvania

LeeAnn Huber

LeeAnn Huber breeds dahlias at Coseytown Flowers in Greencastle, Pennsylvania, the farm she incorporated in 2015. She grew up on a cattle breeding farm and studied animal science at Penn State, and she runs her dahlia program the way a livestock breeder would: to earn the Coseytown name, a seedling must meet a published nine trait standard covering vase life, stem length and strength, bloom productivity, bloom orientation and attachment, growth habit, tuber productivity, and tuber storability. Her originals carry plant patent pending codes and sell exclusively through the farm, where they routinely sell out. In 2025 she introduced a Fancy Single line, singles bred specifically for cut flower work, starting with the red orange Coseytown Oriole.

Profiled varieties

form diagram
LeeAnn Huber

Coseytown Goldilocks

Saturated gold, a honey-mustard yellow with extra ruffling in the petals. The deep, warm tone reads richer than a typical clear yellow dahlia.

Informal DecorativeNearly impossible to find
form diagram
LeeAnn Huber, 2025

Coseytown Oriole

Fiery red-orange with uncommonly dark centers, set off by glossy dark foliage and near-black stems. The dark eye and dark plant make the hot color read even hotter.

SingleNearly impossible to find
form diagram
LeeAnn Huber, 2026

Coseytown Rosewood

Muted muddy red with a contrasting lavender reverse on the newest petals. The two-tone effect, deep red face against a cooler lavender back, gives blooms unusual depth.

Formal DecorativeNearly impossible to find
form diagram
LeeAnn Huber, 2026

Coseytown EverPeach

A solid midtone orange-peach bred to hold a consistent color all season as daylight shortens, a trait the breeder calls rare. Most peach dahlias drift with the season; this one is selected not to.

Formal DecorativeNearly impossible to find
form diagram
LeeAnn Huber, 2026

Coseytown Birthday Girl

Pink with a peachy blush flair, shifting from soft neutral peach to pink with occasional red-pink accents. The color drifts bloom to bloom, giving a single stem a range of soft tones.

BallNearly impossible to find
form diagram
LeeAnn Huber

Coseytown Honey Pot

Color not currently published by the farm, which lists only the seed mix page. The name suggests honey-gold tones, but we have no sourced description to confirm it.

CollaretteNearly impossible to find