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Red and green....interspersed with a little yellow, blue, purple and silver gray.
Christmas was greeted with a wet, grey sky; optimistic me says it keeps the garden green!
Hemerocallis Spider Daylily "Christmas tidings" sets the scene for Xmas in the garden.
Brugmansia hybridAngels' trumpets
Brugmansia is named after Sebald Justin Brugmans 1763-1819. The genus Brugmansia belongs to the nightshade,Solanaceae family which includes tomatoes, potatoes, tobacco, many kinds of peppers, eggplant, and also includes Datura, petunia, nicotiana, solanum, physalis (Chinese lantern) and other ornamentals. Brugmansia is native to South America, particularly the Andes, where they grow on sloping terrain under damp conditions.
These striking plants produce flowers that perfume the night air with their exotic fragrance. All parts of Brugmansia are toxic when ingested.
Hemerocallis, "Old Tangiers", lets you dream of times gone by.....
Alpinia zerumbet, dwarf, variegated Shell ginger.
Sunrise, Friday, 10/Dec/2010, 4.30 AM



Apricot Nectar does very well in my garden zone 11. It is an easy rose to grow, wonderful to pick for a vase. Flowers nearly all year round. Cuttings take well in winter.