A large-fronded fern with straw-colored leaves. It is commonly found in tropical America.
A slender-fronded fern with straw-colored leaves. The fronds can reach between 9 inches and 12 inches…
A four-eared fern with fronds ranging between 6 inches and 3 feet in length. They are commonly found…
A wide-creeping fern with long reddish-brown fronds, which grow to be approximately 1 foot in length.…
A bright brown fern with fronds reaching between 1 foot and 1.5 feet. They are commonly found in the…
A slender-fronded fern with pinnae that are narrower than those of a regular Pteris serrulata, and has…
A trembling fern with fronds ranging between 2 feet and 4 feet in length, and 6 inches and 2 feet in…
A shrub that is native to Europe, northwest Africa, and western Asia. It reaches up to 13 feet in height,…
A pink flower that typically blooms in June. The elliptical leaves are dark green, with silver specks…
A birch-leaved tree with brownish fronds dotted with white. They tend to reach about 22 feet in height,…
A tree which produces dark red flowers and fragrant green leaves. The leaves are oval and serrated.…
A plant which produces white or faintly pink flowers, with very small leaves and lobed leaves. They…
Also known as Campanula rapunculus. "A hardy biennial, cultivated for the use of its fleshy roots in…
A plant which produces numerous flowers with oblong white petals. The leaves and stems are slightly…
A perennial flower with white petals and green foliage. They tend to bloom in April and May, and are…
Also known as Rhamnus cathartica. It is a deciduous shrub with grey-brown bark and spiny branches. The…
A plant with dense amounts of leaves. The stems grow up to 5 feet, and are commonly found in Siberia.
A dense shrub with evergreen leaves and purple flowers, and is used as an ornamental plant. Honey produced…
A greenish-red plant with laciniate-cut leaves. In the spring, edible crimson berries are produced and…
A variable flower with red petals and leathery, ovate leaves. The prickles are unequally distributed,…
Also known as Rudbeckia pinnata. The flowers have drooping yellow petals and can grow up to 5 ft in…
Also known as Butcher's broom. A shrub with flat shoots that give the appearance of stiff, spine-tipped…
Also known as Sagittaria sagittifolia. It is a flowering plant that is native to the wetlands of Europe…
"This is a genus worthy of cultivation in all collections, as its lively flowers are produced in great…
"The colors white and shades of crimson. As a winter blooming plant for a conservatory or parlor window,…
"The flowers are large, of a most brilliant crimson color, and produced in the greatest profusion, if…
"In 1870, Saxafraga sarmentosa was introduced, being beautifully and more distinctly variegated with…
Also known as the cabbage tree. They are endemic to New Zealand and can grow up to 66 feet in height.…
"This is also a very well known flowering plant, of which there are many varieties - white, light and…
"D. Brasiliensis is exceedingly handsome for the center of a vase or stand, forming a beautiful object,…
A hanging basket filled with ferns. The handles of the basket are covered with German ivy.
Also known as Pandanus utilis. It is a tropical tree with an edible fruit. It is native to Madagascar…
"L. Brownii has been considered by some a very difficult species to grow, whereas the whole secret of…
"The bulb is a leaf-bud inclosed in scales or concentric layers, and is found either at the base of…
"Fork-veined leaves are those in which the primary veins divide into two nearly equal secondary veins,…
"Parallel-veined leaves are those in which the veins proceed from their origin to their termination…
"Reticulated leaves are those the veins of which branch and ramify in all directions, forming a complete…
"When a leaf is bounded by a regular curve, and it three or more times as long as it is broad, it is…
"It is said to be ovate when it has the outline of the longitudinal section of an egg."—Darby,…
"Lanceolate, when it is three or more times as long as it is broad, and rounded at the base, and tapering…
"Peltate, with the petiole inserted in the lamina, but not in the center of it."—Darby, 1855