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James H. Schutte
(Mexican Tea)
Long prized in Mexico as an herb and medicinal plant, this weedy annual or short-lived perennial from tropical America is naturalized worldwide from the tropics to the temperate zones. Plants form clumps of erect, waist-high stems with alternate, oval, toothed leaves. Bruised leaves emit a pungent, disagreeable odor. In summer, long spikes of small greenish flowers appear at the stem tips and leaf axils. Tiny greenish single-seeded fruits follow the flowers. Plants readily self-sow.
Mexican...
Gerald L. Klingaman
(Chinese Fringetree)
The billowing, wispy, white flower clusters of Chinese fringetree bring a magnificent touch to the spring landscape. Native to eastern China, Korea and Japan, this deciduous plant grows as a shrub naturally but can be trained as a small tree if lower branches are removed. Taking a while for new spring leaves to emerge, the bright green oval foliage has slightly lighter colored undersides that can be hairy. By mid to late spring, the new growth is topped by masses of clusters of white fragrant blossoms,...
Felder Rushing
(Common Fringetree, Granddaddy Graybeard)
The wispy white flower clusters of common fringetree add a delightful haze to the spring garden. This native to the southeastern United States is a hardy deciduous large shrub or small tree that naturally inhabits moist woodlands. It covers a broad range of distribution, from New York State to Texas, so it is best to plant from regional stock.
When mature, the common fringetree develops an irregular, spreading crown. Its leaves are oblong and medium green with varying degrees of glossiness....
Felder Rushing
(Spider Plant)
Probably the most popular houseplant of all time, spider plant produces a spreading clump of broad, arching, green blades. It is typically grown as a hanging basket specimen because it produces long, pendulous, wiry stems with lots of spidery plantlets at the tips, hence the common name. The most popular variety in commerce is the variegated form, ‘Variegatum.’ The species is native to South Africa where it exists in upland and lowland forests, so it naturally grows well in shade.
The long,...
Gerald L. Klingaman
(Spider Plant, Variegated Spider Plant)
The variegated spider plant is the most commonly grown form. It has attractive thin strap-like leaves of green edged with white. The plants are tender, but vigorous and prolific.
Chlorophytum cosmosum is indigenous to South Africa. It is a clump-forming tender perennial that’s primarily cultivated as an annual or houseplant. Spider plant spreads slowly by thick rhizomes (underground stems) that are easily divided. Its grassy strap-like leaves are delicate, green and white-edged....
Gerald L. Klingaman
(Spider Plant, Variegated Spider Plant)
Forming a clumping tuft of dark green and ivory leaves that often arch or curl backwards, 'Vittatum' is a showy selection of the common spider plant. Indigenous to South Africa this is a frost-tender, clump-forming perennial that is often used as a tropical groundcover or hanging basket houseplant. Spider plant spreads by rhizomes (underground stems) and by young plants borne on the sprawling or dangling stems.
Grass-like leaves are dark green but with a central band of ivory. Plants produce small,...
Forest & Kim Starr
(Spider Plant)
Wide leaves distinguish this spider plant from its more common cousin, Chlorophytum comosum. Chlorophytum orchidastrum is a tender perennial native to West Africa, particularly Sierra Leone. The lush, clump forming tropical is grown exclusively for its beautiful foliage.
Its broad lance-shaped leaves are held in neat rosettes atop fleshy rhizomes that spread slowly. They are glossy, medium green and have lighter petioles, or leaf stems. The roots are thick, fleshy and form...
(Fire Flash Spider Plant, Spider Plant)
The bright orange leaf stems of 'Fire Flash' add an extra flare to this already interesting and attractive tropical. Chlorophytum orchidastrum is a tender perennial that is native to West Africa, particularly Sierra Leone. Wide leaves distinguish this spider plant from its more common cousin, Chlorophytum comosum.
This lush, clump forming tropical is grown exclusively for its beautiful foliage. Its broad lance-shaped leaves are held in neat rosettes atop fleshy rhizomes that...
James Burghardt
(Mexican Orange, Mexican Orange Blossom, Mock Orange)
Sweet, citrusy-smelling white flowers adorn the branches of Mexican orange from very late winter to autumn. An evergreen subtropical shrub from the higher elevations of Mexico, it has glossy, compound foliage, each leaf composed of three, oval leaflets that are fragrant if crushed. In late winter, clusters of five-petaled white blossoms cover the plant, emitting an intoxicating fragrance like that of orange blossoms, and attracting honeybees. The first blooming season lasts for weeks, and then flowering...