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Geoff Bryant - EzineArticles.com Expert Author
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- Gallica Roses
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] If you want roses with fragrance and a sense of history, then look no further than the Gallicas.
- Tuberous Begonias
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] A guide to the cultivation and various types of tuberous begonias.
- Growing Palms
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] A guide to the selection, care and cultivation of some of the hardier palms.
- Cyclamen
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] A guide to the selection and cultivation of these fascinating and very beautiful plants.
- Edgeworthia Chrysantha
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] A short article on a very distinctive shrub.
- Delavay's Blueberry (Vaccinium delavayi)
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] A brief article about an attractive small shrub that adds interest to rockeries.
- The Protea Family (Proteaceae)
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] A comprehensive article on the selection and cultivation of this marvellously varied family of evergreen shrubs and trees.
- Viburnum
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] A guide to the selection and cultivation of this genus noted for is showy and sometimes frangrant spring flower display and for it vibrant late summer to autumn fruit.
- Camellias
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] A brief introduction to the species and cultivars of the genus Camellia and their cultivation.
- Kirengeshoma palmata
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] While it may be among the lesser-known perennials, this late-flowering woodland plant is a valuable addition to the garden.
- Fuchsia procumbens
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] An article about what has to be one of the most unusual and distinctive species in this widely grown genus.
- Flowering Cherries
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] While the briefness of their glory has to be acknowledged, cherries really are the hardy spring-flowering trees for temperate climate gardens. I can think of no others, apart from their close Prunus relatives and some of the magnolias that even come close to rivalling flowering cherries for sheer weight of bloom and vibrance of colour.
- Maples for Autumn Colour
[Travel-and-Leisure:Outdoors] As the weather cools in late summer and the days shorten noticeably so the deciduous trees and shrubs begin to withdraw chlorophyll from their leaves in preparation for the winter shutdown. With less of that vital green pigment to mask them, the other colours within the leaves begin to show through. While the best of the autumn color may be over for this year, the coming winter months are the time to consider how best to prepare for next years autumn glory.
- Daphnes for Scent and Colour
[Home-and-Family:Gardening] Anyone with even a passing knowledge of plants knows that daphnes have wonderfully fragrant flowers. And because some of them - usually the most scented - flower in winter, they're the sort of must-have plants that are usually among the first planted in any new garden.
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