Which one is the guest suite one? I think they're all pretty.
I have never seen this plant flower or produce fruit. Evergreen. [img] ( photo / image / picture from aythya-camellia's Garden )
That is a great shot!
That might be Japonica, which is a popular type of camellia, not sure about its cold hardiness.
The hardiest camellia I know of is 6 at its hardiest. Must be a kind I haven't heard of.
You should probably move it further away--the squirrels can jump from a tree or something less than ten feet away.
Thanks, if I can find it I'll get it, then.
Yes; I'd much rather spend time with my parakeets than with either my sister or with some old friends.
I am rapidly becoming interested in growing Ixora. The only problem is that I live in Zone 6 and I'm not sure if it can be moved inside for the...
I completely agree with you on this, though I have birds instead of mammalian pets.
Good morning! It is a fairly boring day here--not raining, not snowing, not sunny. Still, I hope everyone who reads this has had a good morning...
I had mushroom fettucine and red cabbage with salad dressing for Thanksgiving, so nothing too traditional there! I never eat turkey for the...
It is a zinnia, and a very pretty one with that yellow color.
Is your feeder 10+ feet away from something the squirrels could climb and jump from?
I sort of want the green coneflower, but I think I'm going to annoy my mother a lot; she thinks it's bizarre.
Yes, they can be quite irritating. My mandevilla plant was labeled 'Red Velvet' and when it flowered, it was pink! Anyway, I think it's probably...
More like Crataegus mollis (Downy Hawthorn) leaves than like the leaves in the picture you linked to.
I don't think it's a double variety, no; they must have mislabeled it in the store. Although one picture I found online of white 'Echo' looked...
We're thinking of different cultivars; the 'Green Envy' I heard about was a darker green and didn't have those puffy mounds of petals.
It was labeled 'Echo' something or other in the garden store. Have you heard of any cultivars called something like that?
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