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Showing posts with label Daylily. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daylily. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 November 2012

Prominently Red;

 
 Daylily; Hemerocallis, very popular flowering plant in my garden. I have always been fascinated with these 
 easily to grow and very reliable perennials.They have made huge leaps in looks with gorgeous colours, frills, different sizes from giants to dainty minis.  They start flowering in October and keep going  for 3-4 month, depending on the plant.






Quisqualis indica also known as Rangoon Creeper. a vine with red flower clusters. It is found in Asia and in many other parts of the world. The genus translates into Latin for What is that?
For more information http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quisqualis_indica




Callistemon viminalis, a red weeping bottlebrush; Do you spot the green Lorikeet enjoying the nectar of the flowers.



Dark red Hybrid Tea. Mister Lincoln

Bred by Swim & Weeks (United States, 1964). 

Dark red.  Strong fragrance.  up to 35 petals.  Average diameter 5".  Very large, full (26-40 petals), high-centered to cupped bloom form.  Blooms in flushes throughout the season.
Tall.  Matte, dark green, leathery foliage.
Height of 3' to 6' 7" (90 to 200 cm).  Width of 2' (60 cm).
Hardy.  vigorous.  heat tolerant.  In warmer climates, cut back the remaining canes by about one-third.

This rose does very well in my subtropical garden especially when it is dry.


“We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.”
Abraham Lincoln


A variegated, French bred rose; floriferous and not affected by diseases.







Hippeastrums, prominently red from October into December



I like this dwarf, red Canna lily, flowering from spring to late summer.



Hippies lighten the borders from October into December.




Curcuma is a genus of about 80 accepted species in the plant family Zingiberaceae that contains such species as turmeric and Siam Tulip. The name comes from Arabic kurkum meaning "turmeric". Since assembly of the genus Curcuma by Linnaeus in 1753 about 130 species have been described so far. Some of the species descriptions are without Latin diagnosis or type specimen, therefore the legitimate status of many species is suspicious and remains unclear.


Carl Linnaeus stating that all organisms bear relationships on all sides, their forms changing gradually from one species to the next. From Philosophia Botanica (1751).


Believe it or not:
This world, after all our science and sciences,
 is still miracle;wonderful, inscrutable, magical 
and more, to whosoever will think of it.Thomas Carlyle