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  2. How To Plant A Peach Seed So You Can Grow Your Own Tree - AOL

    www.aol.com/plant-peach-seed-grow-own-020000962.html

    You may wish to plant 2-3 seeds per location, removing all but the strongest sapling once plants initiate growth in spring. Select a planting site with full sun and well-draining soil.

  3. Illicium parviflorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illicium_parviflorum

    Illicium parviflorum, commonly known as yellow anisetree, [1] yellow-anise, swamp star-anise, [3] and small anise tree, [4] is a species of flowering plant in the family Schisandraceae, or alternately, the Illiciaceae. It is native to Florida in the United States. It historically occurred in Georgia as well, but it has been extirpated from the ...

  4. Garden Peach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_Peach

    Its small, bright yellow fruit is the standard globe shape of tomato. With its yellow coloring, blushing vaguely pink mottling when very ripe, and fuzzy skin, it resembles a peach. This cultivar is also extremely prolific. It is rich in iron and vitamin B 5. The plant grows naturally between 200 and 1,000 metres from Colombia to Ecuador and Perú.

  5. Notelaea lloydii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notelaea_lloydii

    Notelaea lloydii, commonly known as Lloyd's olive, [2] or Loyd's native olive, [3] is a species of flowering plant in the family Oleaceae and is endemic to Queensland. It is a shrub with leathery, linear or slightly sickle-shaped leaves, pale yellow or cream-colored flowers with 4-lobed petals, 2 stamens and a glabrous ovary .

  6. Oleaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oleaceae

    Oleaceae, also known as the olive family or sometimes the lilac family, is a taxonomic family of flowering shrubs, trees, and a few lianas in the order Lamiales. [1] It presently comprises 28 genera, one of which is recently extinct. [2] The extant genera include Cartrema, which was resurrected in 2012. [3]

  7. Olea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olea

    Olea (/ ˈ oʊ l i ə / OH-lee-ə [3]) is a genus of flowering plants in the family Oleaceae. It includes 12 species native to warm temperate and tropical regions of the Middle East, southern Europe, Africa, southern Asia, and Australasia. [2] They are evergreen trees and shrubs, with small, opposite, entire leaves. The fruit is a drupe.

  8. Osmanthus fragrans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmanthus_fragrans

    Osmanthus fragrans (lit. ' fragrant osmanthus '), variously known as sweet osmanthus, sweet olive, tea olive, and fragrant olive, is a flowering plant species native to Asia from the Himalayas through the provinces of Guizhou, Sichuan and Yunnan in China, Taiwan, southern Japan and Southeast Asia as far south as Cambodia and Thailand.

  9. Osmanthus heterophyllus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmanthus_heterophyllus

    It is an evergreen shrub or small tree growing to 2–8 m (7–26 ft) tall. The bark is brown to grey or blackish, cracking into small plates on old plants. The leaves are opposite, 3–7 cm long and 1.5–4 cm broad with a thick, leathery texture, lustrous dark green above, paler yellow-green below; the margin is entire or with one to four large spine-tipped teeth on each side.