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This is a large deciduous tree with a spreading, flat crown, growing to a height of 25 metres (82 ft). [1] A profusion of bright green leaves and heavily scented, fluffy flowers are produced in winter or spring. [2] The leaves are twice compound with the leaflets being 2–5 x 8 mm in size. [1]
This species was among the first flat-stemmed species to be described, and the name recalls that it is similar to the first described flat-stemmed cactus Cactus phyllanthus today - Epiphyllum phyllanthus. Some authors state that this plant first flowered in the garden of Château de Malmaison, belonging to the late Empress Joséphine de ...
Agrostis pallens is a perennial bunchgrass growing 10–70 cm (3.9–27.6 in) tall. It is occasionally rhizomatous. [4] The ligule is 1.5–3 mm (0.059–0.118 in) long. The leaf blades are flat or inrolled, and 1.5–5 cm (0.59–1.97 in) long and 1–6 mm (0.039–0.236 in) wide.
Euthamia graminifolia, the grass-leaved goldenrod or flat-top goldenrod, is a North American species of plants in the family Asteraceae. [3]It is native to much of Canada (from Newfoundland to British Columbia), and the northern and eastern United States (primarily the Northeast, the Great Lakes region, and the Ohio Valley, with additional populations in the Southeast, the Great Plains, and a ...
It was SoCal nurseryman Paul Ecke Sr. who took a little-known, spindly outdoor plant from Central America in the early 1920s and bred it into a hardy potted plant "whose tapering red leaves have ...
Allium unifolium, despite its name, usually has 2–3 flat leaves up to 50 cm long. Bulbs, though, are usually solitary, egg-shaped, up to 2 cm long, often formed at the end of rhizomes spreading out from the parent plant. Scapes are round in cross-section, up to 80 cm tall.
This plant is propagated from 3- to 4-inch stem cuttings. Root them directly into 4-inch plastic pots filled with a high-quality potting soil, four or five cuttings per pot.
Plants known as goldenrods include: Bigelowia spp., rayless goldenrods, 2 species native to the Southeastern United States [4] [1] Cuniculotinus gramineus, Panamint rock goldenrod; Euthamia spp., flat-topped goldenrods or grass-leaved goldenrods, 5 species native to North America [1] [5] Gundlachia triantha, Trans-Pecos desert goldenrod