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Aquilegia plants, often referred to as columbine are a cherished part of any garden known for their incredible uniform growth and extended flowering habits, these columbine are also prized for dwarf stature, only reaching 12″-16″ tall. This plant is smothered in nodding blue bell-shaped flowers with white overtones and blue spurs at the ends of the stems from late spring to early summer. Excellent showy flower for the mixed border, cutting gardens, and woodland settings. Attracts Hummingbirds and butterflies to your garden. Remove flowering stems after bloom to encourage additional bloom. Mildew tolerant.
‘Autumn Joy’ Sedum produces delicate bright-pink flowers on large heads that age into a beautiful copper color as fall approaches. ‘Autumn Joy’ is a stout, spreading plant with succulent foliage that pairs well with ornamental grasses and against the deep-green leaves of summer perennials.
Easy to care for, very adaptable, and a popular stand-in for shrubs, this sedum lasts and lasts when other plants begin to wane.
Sedums, like Hostas and have become staples in American perennial gardens in recent years.
And this one, Autumn Joy, is the one responsible. This incredible plant is now at or near the top of everyone’s list of the best perennial flowers of them all. Nothing beats it for late color in the border.
Bold, pink blooms appear in early summer on the Ballerina Pink Salvia.
This collection of Perennial Salvia represents the cutting edge of perennial fashion, with big, bold blooms in an array of chic and stylish colors.
Fragrant soft pink blooms that are larger and more refined.
Attracts pollinators and is deer and rabbit resistant.
Soft pink flowers are held by dark mauve pink calyxes.
With proliferous flowers that tumble over the sides their containers, Begonias have become very popular for use in hanging baskets. Begonia Odorosa Bulbs will delight you with abundant flowers. The single and double blooms up to 6″ across have ruffled petals and grow amid lush bright green foliage. Enjoy cascades of flowers from early summer through the first frost.
Hardy in zones 8-10 but can be grown in all zones.
Perhaps the most stunning Canna of all, Bloomsz Black Knight Canna is both bold and beautiful. Leaves of very deep red to almost black form the backdrop for shocking scarlet-red almost blood-red flowers. Stems are strong and upright. The large, paddle-like leaves grow from stems in long narrow rolls that slowly unfurl. Nectar attracts hummingbirds, butterflies, and bees. These exotic beauties are easy to grow and maintain.
Open-faced flowers perched like butterflies on tall stems best describes this delightful mix of Butterfly Daisies. Flowers have domed spiny centers of yellowish brown to reddish brown, surrounded by sometimes drooping petals called rays in vibrant carmine-red, deep golden-yellow, light purple, or dazzling white. You’ll enjoy this sensational display in your garden from summer through early fall.
Add an instant touch of the tropics to any part of your garden with Bloomsz Canna Roots. Large, attractive, paddle-like leaves grow from stems in long narrow rolls that slowly unfurl. Leaves may be solid green, blue-green, variegated, or striped with bronze or maroon. Flowers of red, yellow, orange, or pink, some even speckled or with borders of a different color, attract hummingbirds, butterflies, and bees. These exotic beauties are easy to grow and maintain.
Sweet and delectable, Washington Navel oranges are perfect for fresh eating and juicing. The seedless, easy to recognize fruit has a prominent navel that is the growth of a second fruit embedded at the base of the first fruit. Smaller than the fruit in which it is embedded, it is also seedless and segmented. The flesh of a Washington Navel orange has a firm texture, is moderately juicy and rich in flavor.
Add the incredibly fresh, citrus scent of lemon blossoms to your home by growing a lemon tree! Extremely fragrant white flowers bloom in spring and summer among attractive, glossy green leaves. As lemons begin to appear and mature, they help to provide visual interest for the remainder of the year. Lemon trees grow well indoors while providing edible fruit to enjoy in beverages, in cooking, and as garnishes.
Key Lime trees are the most popular lime trees grown in North America. Amidst dense, evergreen foliage, small buds produce pure white, fragrant blossoms. The trees bear fruit with a very thin rind and flavorful, juicy fruit throughout the year. The fruit of Key Lime Pie, it is used in mixed drinks and to add a tangy lime flavor to cooked fish.
Growing Instructions: Key Lime trees are great indoor and outdoor patio plants. For best results, within 4-6 weeks of receiving your tree, transplant it into a larger pot that drains well and is approximately 8-12″ in diameter to give the roots room to grow. In the spring move your potted tree outdoors into full sun when the threat of frost is past. Bring it back indoors in the fall before the frost season begins. Fertilize regularly with high nitrogen formula, 5-3-3 ratio. Water thoroughly while letting the surface soil dry between watering. Do not overwater. Prune by pinching back the tips of new growth toward the interior branches. Remove any new growth or stems near the soil.
Known for its sweeter, less acidic fruit, the Meyer Lemon tree is also valued for the incredibly fresh, citrus scent of its blossoms. Even the skin is tasty, and it is great for cooking or to garnish baked goods and liquid refreshments. Extremely hardy, it grows well both indoors and outdoors and provides fruit that will be enjoyed over a long period of time.
Persian Lime trees are best known for their dense, glossy evergreen foliage, and small buds that produce pure white, fragrant blossoms. Persian limes are those most often found in grocery stores. Abundant, large limes grow at the ends of the branches of the trees and need little heat to ripen. The thin, smooth green rind and seedless, juicy flesh make it ideal for cooking, zesting, and garnishing. It produces abundant fruit when grown both indoors and outdoors.
Growing Instructions: Persian Lime trees are great indoor and outdoor patio plants. For best results, within 4-6 weeks of receiving your tree, transplant it into a larger pot that drains well and is approximately 8-12″ in diameter to give the roots room to grow. In the spring move your potted tree outdoors into full sun when the threat of frost is past. Bring it back indoors in the fall before the frost season begins. Fertilize regularly with high nitrogen formula, 5-3-3 ratio. Water thoroughly while letting the surface soil dry between watering. Do not overwater. Prune by pinching back the tips of new growth toward the interior branches. Remove any new growth or stems near the soil.
Washington navel oranges are perfect for fresh eating and juicing. The seedless, easily recognized fruit has a prominent navel that is the growth of a second fruit embedded at the base of the first fruit. Smaller than the fruit in which it is embedded, it is also seedless and segmented. The flesh of a Washington navel orange has a firm texture, is moderately juicy and rich in flavor. The Dwarf Washington Navel Orange tree makes it ideal as an indoor container plant.
Growing Instructions: Washington Navel Orange trees are great indoor and outdoor patio plants. For best results, in the spring move your potted tree outdoors into full sun when the threat of frost is past. Bring it back indoors in the fall before the frost season begins. Fertilize regularly with high nitrogen formula, 5-3-3 ratio. Water thoroughly while letting the surface soil dry between watering. Do not overwater. Prune by pinching back the tips of new growth toward the interior branches. Remove any new growth or stems near the soil.
Key Lime trees are the most popular lime trees grown in North America. Amidst dense, evergreen foliage, small buds produce pure white, fragrant blossoms. The trees bear fruit with a very thin rind and flavorful, juicy fruit throughout the year. The fruit of Key Lime Pie, it is used in mixed drinks and to add a tangy lime flavor to cooked fish.
Growing Instructions: Key Lime trees are great indoor and outdoor patio plants. For best results, within 4-6 weeks of receiving your tree, transplant it into a larger pot that drains well and is approximately 8-12″ in diameter to give the roots room to grow. In the spring move your potted tree outdoors into full sun when the threat of frost is past. Bring it back indoors in the fall before the frost season begins. Fertilize regularly with high nitrogen formula, 5-3-3 ratio. Water thoroughly while letting the surface soil dry between watering. Do not overwater. Prune by pinching back the tips of new growth toward the interior branches. Remove any new growth or stems near the soil.
Known for its sweeter, less acidic fruit, the Meyer Lemon tree is also valued for the incredibly fresh, citrus scent of its blossoms. Even the skin is tasty, and it is great for cooking or to garnish baked goods and liquid refreshments. Extremely hardy, it grows well both indoors and outdoors and provides fruit that will be enjoyed over a long period of time.
Everyone loves to snack on Nules Clementines because their thin, loose rind is so easy to peel and their flesh can be described as juicy and sweeter than candy. Seedless or with very few seeds, Nules Clementines can be eaten fresh, served in salads, canned, and used in baked goods and marmalades. Growing among shiny, evergreen leaves, flowers appear in early May. Glossy, red-orange fruit usually ripens in October through December.
Growing Instructions: Nules Clementine Orange trees are perhaps the best both indoor and outdoor patio plants. In the spring move your potted tree outdoors into full sun when the threat of frost is past. Bring it back indoors in the fall before the frost season begins. Fertilize regularly with high nitrogen formula, 5-3-3 ratio. Water thoroughly while letting the surface soil dry between watering. Do not overwater. Prune by pinching back the tips of new growth toward the interior branches. Remove any new growth or stems near the soil.
Highly valued as an ornamental, the Pink Variegated Lemon tree is the most fragrant of all lemon trees. Glossy apple-green leaves edged in creamy white provide a background for white blooms. The rind of the young fruit is green striped with gold that matures to pale yellow. Pink flesh with few if any seeds produces juice with a tangy, tart flavor that makes the best lemonade.
The Ponkan Mandarin bears shiny, bright green leaves all year long. In spring, strongly scented blossoms attract bees and butterflies. The large, easy-to-peel fruit are usually eaten out of hand or used in fruit salads, desserts and main dishes.
Growing Instructions: Ponkan Mandarin trees are great indoor and outdoor patio plants. For best results, in the spring move your potted tree outdoors into full sun when the threat of frost is past. Bring it back indoors in the fall before the frost season begins. Fertilize regularly with high nitrogen formula, 5-3-3 ratio. Water thoroughly while letting the surface soil dry between watering. Do not overwater. Prune by pinching back the tips of new growth toward the interior branches. Remove any new growth or stems near the soil.
The Thornless Key Lime tree is the most popular lime tree grown in North America. Amidst dense, evergreen foliage, small buds produce pure white, fragrant blossoms. The tree bears fruit with a very thin rind and flavorful, juicy fruit throughout the year. The fruit of Key Lime tree is used in mixed drinks and to add a tangy lime flavor to cooked fish.
Crocosmia Lucifer delights both gardeners and professional flower arrangers. Hardy and easy to maintain, the plants are deer and drought resistant. Stiff, arching stems bear sprays of funnel-shaped, fire-engine-red blooms amid mounding sword-shape foliage. Florists frequently use Crocosmia to add sparks of color and graceful curves to cut-flower arrangements. Gardeners plant them in groups for a colorful border. They’re so easy to grow, you’ll find yourself cutting some and bringing them indoors to add a bit of drama to your own flower arrangements.
Favorites of hummingbirds and butterflies. Long vase life.
Be the first in your neighborhood to grow this amazing Dahlia! Dark burgundy almost black flowers grow amid dark green foliage. Use these medium-sized blooms to provide contrast when combined with pale pastel, creamy white, and white Dahlias in arrangements and bouquets. Plant them in borders, beds, and along pathways in similar groupings to provide a WOW factor and show-stopping curb appeal.
Dark bronze foliage that resembles chocolate at its very best provides the backdrop for the Bloomsz Dahlia Candy Bulb Mixture. Very floriferous, pink flowers with peach centers provide the decorative contrast. Excellent in borders and beds and stunning when added to cut flower arrangements.
Dahlia Jill are charming small, ball-shaped pompon flowers in a mixture of colors with 2-3″ blooms. They make an excellent and easy flower to place in cut flower arrangements. They prefer full sun to light shade, and bloom from mid-summer to fall. They are a perennial in Zones 9-11.
Dinnerplate dahlias are best known for their large flowers ranging from 8″ to 10″ in diameter. Bloomsz brings shades of purple, yellow, and red in the Dinnerplate Dahlia Mix. It’s easy to add splashes of color to borders and beds. Grow them in a “cutting garden” to use in delightful summer arrangements or to share with friends and neighbors. Their long bloom time will provide bursts of color when most other species have faded away.
Every gardener longs for long-lasting, colorful blossoms.
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