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Showy spring flowers in purples, pinks, yellow, and white pop against the glossy green foliage of this shrub. New varieties of rhododendron are more cold tolerant, but make sure it gets dappled shade.
It is a vigorous, fast-growing deciduous shrub or tree growing to 8 m (26 ft) tall by 10 m (33 ft) broad, bearing masses of pendent, bell-shaped white flowers which appear in spring before the leaves. The flowers are followed by green, four-winged fruit. The leaves turn yellow in autumn. [3] [4]
Azalea leafy gall can be particularly destructive to azalea leaves during the early spring. Hand picking infected leaves is the recommended method of control. [4] They can also be subject to Phytophthora root rot in moist, hot conditions. [5] Azaleas share the economically important disease Phytophthora cinnamomi with more than 3000 other plants.
Every spring in late April, Great Smoky Mountains National Park is the site of the week-long annual spring wildflower pilgrimage [2] to celebrate this diversity. The park is also the site of the All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory [3] to inventory all the living organisms in the park. This article lists some of the Wildflowers of the Great Smoky ...
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Claytonia caroliniana is a flowering, woodland perennial herb. [5] [4] It grows from March though June and is one of the earliest spring ephemerals. [4] The plant grows from spherical underground tubers in light humus. They sprout and bloom before the tree canopy develops.
Spring is officially a month away — the start date is March 20 — and yet the allergy season associated with it has already made its presence known in South Carolina.
Solidago verna is a species of flowering plant in the aster family known by the common names springflowering goldenrod [3] and spring goldenrod. It is native to North Carolina and South Carolina in the United States. [1] [4] Solidago verna is a perennial herb growing up to about 1.2 meters (4 feet) in height.