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  2. To rake, or not to rake? What to do with the leaves in your ...

    www.aol.com/weather/rake-not-rake-leaves-yard...

    As fall foliage reaches its peak and begins to fade across most of the United States, trees are shedding their leaves in preparation for winter. This annual event poses a common question for ...

  3. A Stroll Through the Garden: Clematis - the queen of the climbers

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    Clematis, the queen of the climbers, is actually three sisters that bloom at different times. There is one that blooms early in the season, some are evergreen and the rest are deciduous.

  4. Love Clematis? Here's How to Keep it Beautiful In Your Garden

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  5. Calophoma clematidina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calophoma_clematidina

    Calophoma clematidina is a fungal plant pathogen and the most common cause of the disease clematis wilt affecting large-flowered varieties of Clematis.Symptoms of infection include leaf spotting, wilting of leaves, stems or the whole plant and internal blackening of the stem, often at soil level.

  6. Clematis terniflora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clematis_terniflora

    Clematis terniflora is a vine with opposite, pinnately compound, leathery-textured, shiny green leaves (3-5 oval to elliptic leaflets with cordate bases). Vines woody. Branches shallowly 4--10-grooved, climbing stems. The flowers are white, blooming in fall.

  7. Clematis virginiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clematis_virginiana

    The leaves are opposite and pinnately compound, trifoliate (3 leaflets) that have coarse unequal teeth on the margins. It produces small dull white flowers of width 13 to 19 mm ( 1 ⁄ 2 to 3 ⁄ 4 in) from July to September that are faintly sweetly fragrant; sometimes dioecious so that there are separate staminate (male) and pistillate (female ...

  8. Clematis occidentalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clematis_occidentalis

    Clematis occidentalis is a species of flowering plant in the buttercup family known by the common names western blue virginsbower or purple clematis. [1] It is native to much of southern Canada and the northern United States .

  9. When will the leaves change color in Missouri this year?

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