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Purple Wave Petunia
(Petunia sp.) |
- Vigorous summer
annual; single plant may cover 4 square feet.
- Forms a dense
mat about 6 inches high; not leggy like other petunias.
- Flowers are a
rose-purple and continually replace one another.
- Durable and heat
tolerant.
- Plant in full
sun, allowing room to grow.
- Amend soil with
composted bark or rotted manure.
- Incorporate 10-10-10
at 2 lbs. per 100 square feet and follow up with liquid fertilizer every
two weeks.
- Excellent in hanging
baskets; pinch back as necessary to encourage branching.
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Wild Indigo
(Baptisia spp.) |
- Herbaceous perennial
growing 5 feet high with equal spread.
- Native plant,
tolerating summer heat, winter cold, poor soils and drought.
- Flowers resemble
that of garden pea; color varies -- deep blue to creamy yellow to pure
white.
- Flowers borne
near tips of gray-green branches having three-lobed leaves.
- Best in full sun,
becoming leggy in shade.
- Ideal background
plant in the perennial border.
- Grows in clumps,
spreading slowly; divide every two to three years in fall.
- At planting, incorporate
1 lb. 10-10-10 per 100 square feet.
- Upon establishment,
fertilize with 10-10-10 in spring and again in late summer.
- After first frost,
prune the plant close to the ground to prepare for next year.
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Hummingbird Clethra
(Clethra alnifolia 'Hummingbird') |
- Flowering deciduous
shrub growing to 3-4 feet and spreading up to 5 feet.
- Attractive flowering
shrub known for beauty, fragrance and low maintenance.
- Spicy, fragrant
white flowers about 1/2 inch across appear during July and August.
- Flowers top to
bottom for four to six weeks, giving way to small brown capsules that
ripen in late fall.
- Clethra forms
new sprouts from the crown that can be separated and transplanted.
- Low-maintenance
plant, flowering in full sun or partial shade.
- Prefers well-drained,
slightly acid soils; ideal around lakes, ponds and water gardens.
- Prior to bud break,
apply 1 lb. 10-10-10 per 100 square feet; repeat after summer blooms.
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Lipan, Sioux, Tonto and Yuma Crape Myrtles
(Lagerstroemia indicaxL.
fauriei) |
- Flowering deciduous
shrubs or small trees with attractive flowers and interesting bark.
- 'Lipan' -- Upright,
muti-stemmed small tree reaching 10-15 feet, light orange to dull red
fall color, rosy-lavender flowers in July and August, bark becoming
whitish-beige with age.
- 'Sioux' -- Small
tree reaching 10-15 feet, light maroon to bright red fall color, dark
pink flowers in July and August, exfoliating bark with gray-brown new
bark.
- 'Tonto' -- Semi-dwarf
multi-stemmed shrub growing 8-10 feet, bright maroon fall color, large
fuchsia-red flowers in July and August, bark exfoliates to cream and
gray-brown at maturity.
- 'Yuma' -- Multi-stemmed
shrub reaching 10-15 feet, dull yellow-orange fall color, flowers are
bi-colored medium lavender in July and August, exfoliating bark reveals
light gray color.
- Best planted in
fall or late winter; needs well-drained soil and ample water during
first year.
- Select three to
five main trunks and raise canopy by removing lower branches; prune
in late winter.
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Lipan |