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  2. This is How to Grow a Bleeding Heart Plant, According to an ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/grow-bleeding-heart-plant...

    Here's everything you need to know about growing these unique heart-shaped dangling flowers. This is How to Grow a Bleeding Heart Plant, According to an Expert Skip to main content

  3. Lamprocapnos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamprocapnos

    The Asian bleeding-heart grows to 120 cm tall and 45 cm wide. It is a rhizomatous herbaceous perennial with 3-lobed compound leaves on fleshy green to pink stems. The arching horizontal racemes of up to 20 pendent flowers are borne in spring and early summer.

  4. Clerodendrum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clerodendrum

    Clerodendrum is a genus of flowering plants formerly placed in the family Verbenaceae, but now considered to belong to the Lamiaceae (mint) family. Its common names include glorybower, bagflower, pagoda flower and bleeding-heart.

  5. Clerodendrum thomsoniae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clerodendrum_thomsoniae

    Bleeding heart. The plant was named at the request of Rev. William Cooper Thomson (1829-22 March 1878), a missionary and physician in Nigeria, in honor of his late first wife. [6] [7] This plant was very popular during the mid 19th century under the name "beauty bush". It lost favour only when its unusual culture conditions were forgotten.

  6. Dicentra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dicentra

    Dicentra (Greek dís "twice", kéntron "spur"), [3] known collectively as the bleeding-hearts, is a genus containing eight species of herbaceous flowering perennial plants with unique, "heart"-shaped flowers and finely divided foliage. The species are, primarily, native to North America, although several are found in temperate East Asia.

  7. Dicentra formosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dicentra_formosa

    Dicentra formosa (western, wild or Pacific bleeding-heart) is a species of flowering plant in the poppy family, Papaveraceae (subfamily: Fumarioideae).With its fern-like foliage and inflorescence of drooping pink, purple, yellow or cream "hearts", this species is native to the United States' Pacific Northwest and West Coast of North America.

  8. Hardiness zone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardiness_zone

    As an example, Quebec City in Canada is located in zone 4, but can rely on a significant snow cover every year, making it possible to cultivate plants normally rated for zones 5 or 6. But, in Montreal, located to the southwest in zone 5, it is sometimes difficult to cultivate plants adapted to the zone because of the unreliable snow cover.

  9. Dicentra eximia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dicentra_eximia

    Dicentra eximia (wild or fringed bleeding-heart, turkey-corn) is a flowering plant with fernlike leaves and oddly shaped flowers native to the Appalachian Mountains. It is similar to the Pacific bleeding-heart (Dicentra formosa), which grows on the Pacific Coast. Dicentra eximia is a perennial herb in the Papaveraceae family. [2]