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Russell Stafford
(Ornamental Strawberry, Pink Panda Strawberry, Strawberry)
This pretty, pink-flowered strawberry is technically a hybrid between a strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa) and a potentilla (Potentilla palustris). Introduced by Blooms of Bressingham, Pink Panda is an herbaceous perennial grown primarily for its pink flowers rather than its small, edible, red fruit. It blooms in spring and again sporadically through summer and fall.
In general, strawberries grow best in full to partial sun and fertile, organic-rich soil with good drainage....
James Burghardt
(Lipstick Ornamental Strawberry, Ornamental Strawberry, Strawberry)
This pretty, pink-flowered strawberry is technically a hybrid between a strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa) and a potentilla (Potentilla palustris). It is an herbaceous perennial grown primarily for its deep rose-pink flowers rather than its sparse, small, edible fruit. It flowers in spring and again sporadically through summer and fall. It spreads by runners to form ground-covering clumps of attractive three-lobed "strawberry" leaves.
In general, strawberries grow best...
James H. Schutte
(Beach Strawberry, Strawberry, Wild Strawberry)
This strawberry from the Pacific coasts of North and South America produces relatively little fruit, but it makes a fine ground cover for sun or partial shade. It is one of the parents of the modern garden strawberry.
A herbaceous perennial that spreads via runners, wild strawberry forms low carpets of leathery, glossy, dark green leaves that each have three coarsely toothed leaflets. The foliage take on a beautiful red tint in winter. Plants spread, but not as rampantly as many other strawberries....
Michael Charters, www.calflora.net
(Alpine Strawberry, Strawberry)
Whether dainty wild woodland fruits or juicy cultivated jewels, strawberries are a favorite fruit worldwide. There are approximately 20 species in the genus Fragaria, a member of the rose family. Most are native to the temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere and range as far south as India and South America.
Most species are herbaceous perennials that spread via stolons (rooting above ground stems) and have three or five parted coarsely toothed green leaves. Their pretty white flowers...
(Alpine Strawberry, Rugen Alpine Strawberry, Strawberry)
Whether dainty wild woodland fruits or juicy cultivated jewels, strawberries are a favorite fruit worldwide. There are approximately 20 species in the genus Fragaria, a member of the rose family. Most are native to the temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere and range as far south as India and South America.
Most species are herbaceous perennials that spread via stolons (rooting above ground stems) and have three or five parted coarsely toothed green leaves. Their pretty white flowers...
(Alpine Strawberry, Strawberry, Variegated Woodland Strawberry)
Whether dainty wild woodland fruits or juicy cultivated jewels, strawberries are a favorite fruit worldwide. There are approximately 20 species in the genus Fragaria, a member of the rose family. Most are native to the temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere and range as far south as India and South America.
Most species are herbaceous perennials that spread via stolons (rooting above ground stems) and have three or five parted coarsely toothed green leaves. Their pretty white flowers...
Gerald L. Klingaman
(Ash, Fan-West Ash)
The vigorous, sterile ash, ‘Fan-West’, is super tough. It thrives in poor, dry soils and also grows well in cold, windy, harsh locations. This outstanding deciduous shade tree has a strong upright central leader and broad, rounded crown with great branching. It is a hybrid between two North American natives, the velvet ash (Fraxinus velutina) and the green ash (F. pennsylvanica) that was discovered by Eddie Fanick of San Antonio,Texas as a natural seedling on the banks of the Guadalupe...
Gerald L. Klingaman
(White Ash)
The classic North American shade tree, white ash, is a large beautiful tree with a broad canopy, upright sturdy trunk and pretty foliage. It’s a fast growing hardwood that naturally exists in hilly forests from Texas to the farthest northeastern reaches of Canada. The lumber it yields is valuable for making furniture, baseball bats, tool handles and flooring.
This upright tree develops an evenly branched oval or rounded crown. The leaves are compound and have five to nine deep green, oval leaflets....