enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. However, you can choose between yellow, white, pink, and orange varieties for a bold color palette. This perennial herb is also deer and rabbit-resistant. USDA Hardiness Zones : 3 to 9

  3. Garden marguerite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_marguerite

    In wild Argyranthemum species, which form the basis of garden marguerites, the flower heads have yellow centres and usually white rays, although A. maderense has pale yellow rays. [2] Modern cultivars have much more varied flower colours and shapes.

  4. Cleretum bellidiforme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleretum_bellidiforme

    Cleretum bellidiforme, [2] commonly called Livingstone daisy, Bokbaaivygie , or Buck Bay vygie, is a species of flowering plant in the family Aizoaceae, native to the Cape Peninsula in South Africa. It is a low-growing succulent annual growing to 25 cm (10 in), and cultivated for its iridescent, many-petalled, daisy-like blooms in shades of ...

  5. Bellis perennis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bellis_perennis

    Bellis perennis (/ ˈ b ɛ l ə s p ə ˈ r ɛ n ə s /), [2] [3] the daisy, is a European species of the family Asteraceae, often considered the archetypal species of the name daisy. To distinguish this species from other plants known as daisies, it is sometimes qualified or known as common daisy , lawn daisy or English daisy .

  6. Why You Should Think Twice Before Tossing Your Mums This Year

    www.aol.com/why-think-twice-tossing-mums...

    The flowers may be spidery or look like daisies, pom-poms, or thick cushions of slightly curved petals. Korean and rubellum mums grow lankier at 2-4 feet tall and look beautiful draped along a ...

  7. Calotis cuneifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calotis_cuneifolia

    Calotis cuneifolia is a small perennial upright or prostrate herb to 25–60 cm (9.8–23.6 in) high and covered with rigid hairs. The basal leaves more or less woody, soon withering, upper leaves wedge to spoon-shaped, lobed near the apex, 8–40 mm (0.31–1.57 in) long, 5–20 mm (0.20–0.79 in) wide, simple, sessile, occasional hairs and arranged alternately.

  8. Osteospermum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osteospermum

    The daisy-like composite flower consists of disc florets and ray florets, growing singly at the end of branches or sometimes in inflorescences of terminal corymbose cymes. The disc florets are pseudo-bisexual and come in several colors such as blue, yellow and purple.

  9. Cota tinctoria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cota_tinctoria

    Cota tinctoria, the golden marguerite, yellow chamomile, or oxeye chamomile, is a species of perennial flowering plant in the sunflower family. Other common names include dyer's chamomile, Boston daisy, and Paris daisy. In horticulture this plant is still widely referred to by its synonym Anthemis tinctoria. [2]