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James H. Schutte
(Calibrachoa, Callieâ„¢ Calibrachoa, Million Bells)
The spreading, trailing Calibrachoa in the Callieâ„¢ Series come in lots of vibrant colors, including orange, rose-red, yellow and white. These Goldsmith Seeds/Syngenta introductions are vigorous and produce many small, petunia-like flowers that bloom all season long.
Calibrachoa are warm season annuals to tender perennials with low mounding to trailing habits. They are well-branched and flower prolifically with numerous small, funnel-shaped, petunia-like flowers that come in nearly every...
Maureen Gilmer
(Calibrachoa, Celebrationâ„¢ Calibrachoa, Million Bells)
Once botanically lumped in with petunias, calibrachoas have become some of the best warm season bedding plants on the market. Members of the free-flowering Celebrationâ„¢ series are compact and produce bountiful small, funnel-shaped flowers all summer. These appear above dense, cascading plants with small resinous pale green leaves that are fragrant. Some cultivars in this series even have variegated foliage. The flowers come in many shades including yellow, white, pink, purple, red and orange. A number...
(Calibrachoa, Colorburstâ„¢ Calibrachoa, Million Bells)
Differing from petunias in their smaller flowers and wiry, semi-woody stems, these cold-tender, heat-loving perennials are becoming increasingly popular as annual bedding and container plants. Most of the approximately 30 Calibrachoa species are native to southern Brazil or neighboring areas. Commercially available cultivars descend from hybrids among these species, and are propagated vegetatively.
These low, mounding to trailing plants have well-branched stems furnished with small,...
James H. Schutte
(Calibrachoa, Million Bells, Million Bells® Calibrachoa)
Calibrachoa have become some of the most popular bedding plants on the market. Members of the Million Bells® Series are no exception. They have distinctly trailing habits and produce an explosion of colorful blooms all season. These warm season tender perennials are often grown as annuals and look like miniature petunias, but their funnel-shaped flowers are smaller and less radial. There are many color variants including red, pink, white, orange, apricot and yellow-flowered cultivars. Their...
(Calibrachoa, Million Bells, Minifamousâ„¢ Calibrachoa)
The early flowering Calibrachoa in the Minifamousâ„¢ Series are floriferous and stand up well to wind, rain and hot sun. These popular bedding plants have pleasing cascading habits and produce an explosion of colorful blooms all season. They are warm season tender perennials that look like miniature petunias, but their funnel-shaped flowers are smaller and less radial. There are many color variants and some cultivars in the series are double. Calibrachoa blooms appear from summer...
James H. Schutte
(Calibrachoa, Million Bells, Noa Calibrachoa)
The vigorous, semi-trailing Calibrachoa in the Noaâ„¢ Series are floriferous and early-blooming. These popular bedding plants produce an explosion of colorful blooms all season. They are warm season tender perennials that look like miniature petunias, but their funnel-shaped flowers are smaller and less radial. There are many color variants and some cultivars in the series are double. Calibrachoa blooms appear from summer to fall along trailing stems lined with small, light green...
James H. Schutte
(Calibrachoa, Million Bells, Superbells® Calibrachoa)
The vigorous, semi-upright, mounding Calibrachoa in the Superbells® Series are high-performing and have extra large flowers. These popular bedding plants produce an explosion of colorful blooms all season. They are warm season tender perennials that look like miniature petunias, but their funnel-shaped flowers are smaller and less radial. There are many color variants and some cultivars in the series are double. Calibrachoa blooms appear from summer to fall along trailing stems...
Audrey, Eve and George DeLange
(Baja Fairyduster, Flame Bush, Tabardillo)
Baja fairyduster is a delicate-looking, bright-colored, evergreen shrub for very hot, dry desert gardens. It demands a frost-free climate and plenty of direct sun. It is native to sandy washes and rocky slopes of the dry cape regions of Baja California and Sonora, Mexico. The plant is thorny and deer-resistant. Branching is open and the narrow arching twigs are studded with soft fern-like, compound leaves.
This shrub blooms after the rainy season, whether spring or summer. Blooms may also appear...
Maureen Gilmer
(Fairyduster, Mock Mesquite)
Grown (and named) for its delicate and unusual winter blooms, fairyduster is a low, spreading, deciduous shrub from the southwestern United States and Northwest Mexico, where it grows in dry washes and gullies at low to middle altitudes. Gray, twiggy, often sprawling stems with small, alternating, pinnately compound leaves give rise to powderpuff heads of pink stamens in late winter and early spring. Their nectar attracts hummingbirds and other polllinators. Silvery seed pods follow the flowers....
Gerald L. Klingaman
(Wine Cups)
A drought-tolerant powerhouse, wine cups is so delicate and colorful you will find it hard to believe it is tough. This native of the central and eastern United States is a low-growing, herbaceous perennial that produces many large, vivid magenta, cupped flowers in the heat of summer. These appear above deeply lobed, palm-shaped leaves of medium green.
Once established, wine cups will thrive in full sun and average to poor soil. It will not tolerate "wet feet", so be sure you plant them in well...