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Plants Matching usda hardiness zone 12

Returned 3423 results. Page 28 of 343.

Image of Begonia

James Burghardt

(Barbara Hamilton Begonia, Cane Begonia)

Adored for beautiful blooms and wildly colorful foliage, Begonia is one of the largest genera of flowering plants. There are over 1,500 species and more than 10,000 cultivars and hybrids. They are found all over the world but most originate from sub-tropical and tropical regions.

The plants come in many different forms. They are fleshy, herbaceous and may be annual or perennial. In habit, they can be shrubby, climbing, or epiphytic (tree-dwelling). The leaves are simple or compound...

Image of Begonia

James Burghardt

(Bashful Bandit Begonia, Rhizomatous Begonia)

Adored for beautiful blooms and wildly colorful foliage, Begonia is one of the largest genera of flowering plants. There are over 1,500 species and more than 10,000 cultivars and hybrids. They are found all over the world but most originate from sub-tropical and tropical regions.

The plants come in many different forms. They are fleshy, herbaceous and may be annual or perennial. In habit, they can be shrubby, climbing, or epiphytic (tree-dwelling). The leaves are simple or compound...

Image of Begonia

Terra Nova Nurseries, Inc.

(Begonia, River Nile Begonia)

The River Nile begonia's stunning metallic pink and silver foliage is complemented by salmon-pink flowers by very late winter. This tender herbaceous perennial is the result of extensive hybridization and is classified as a rex begonia. Each upright leaf is comprised of many long, oval, jagged-edged leaflets that are silver with green veins, but have varying blushes of purple or pink. In the coolness of fall and winter the leaves tend to be much more pink. In very early spring small salmon to coral-pink...

Image of Begonia

James H. Schutte

(Dragon Wing Pink Begonia, Dragon Wing™ Begonia)

Displaying showy flowers for many months on end, Dragon Wing™ Pink begonia ('Bepapink') is a popular tender perennial used in containers or for bedding. It results from a cross between a semperflorens (wax) and a cane-type (angel-wing) begonia.

This fibrous-rooted begonia bears lustrous, fleshy, asymmetrical leaves on knee-high, succulent stems. The dark green leaves may be tinted with bronze in sunnier sites. This floriferous plant blooms from spring through frost, presenting small, loose clusters...

Image of Begonia

James H. Schutte

(Dragon Wing™ Red Begonia)

Bearing showy flowers for many months on end, Dragon Wing™ Red begonia ('Bepared') is a popular tender perennial used in containers or for bedding. It results from a cross between a semperflorens (wax) and a cane-type (angel-wing) begonia.

This fibrous-rooted begonia bears lustrous, fleshy, asymmetrical leaves on knee-high, succulent stems. The dark green leaves may be tinted with bronze in sunnier sites. This floriferous plant blooms from spring through frost, presenting small, loose clusters...

Image of Begonia

Terra Nova Nurseries, Inc.

(Begonia, Black Mamba Begonia)

Both the foliage and flowers of ‘Black Mamba’ stand out, though it is most admired as a foliage plant. Its velvety, star-shaped leaves are nearly black with contrasting burgundy undersides, and in winter it produces a lovely display of pink flowers. This Terra Nova introduction was bred by Brad Thompson in 1993 as a cross between 'Peggy Frost' and 'Dr. Cleo.' It is a surprisingly vigorous, rhizomatous selection best-suited for container culture.

Each large leaf is star-like in appearance with...

Image of Begonia

James Burghardt

(Boomer Begonia, Thick-stemmed Begonia)

Adored for beautiful blooms and wildly colorful foliage, Begonia is one of the largest genera of flowering plants. There are over 1,500 species and more than 10,000 cultivars and hybrids. They are found all over the world but most originate from sub-tropical and tropical regions.

The plants come in many different forms. They are fleshy, herbaceous and may be annual or perennial. In habit, they can be shrubby, climbing, or epiphytic (tree-dwelling). The leaves are simple or compound...

Image of Begonia

Jesse Saylor

(Boston Cherries 'n Chocolate Rex Begonia, Rex Begonia)

This group, one of many in the begonia family, is prized for its astounding leaves, which amply earn the designation “Rex” (King). The leaves vary wildly in shape from whorled or curled like a snail to broad and much-divided. They vary even more wildly in color and patterning. These begonias produce sparse sprays of small pink or white flowers but the leaves upstage and conceal the blooms.

Modern Rex begonias are complex hybrids that derive from crosses between the Southeast Asian native Begonia...

Image of Begonia

Ernst Benary® Inc.

(Cocktail Brandy Wax Begonia, Fibrous Begonia, Wax Begonia)

Popular bedding plants, Cocktail Series wax begonias are tender perennials of hybrid origin. These plants are evergreen in tropical to sub-tropical zones but grown as annuals in temperate zones. The 'Brandy' cultivar displays a striking combination of clear pink blooms and dark bronze foliage.

These plants are best in well drained soil in full to partial sun. Sandy soils should have organic matter incorporated to diminish stress in summer's heat. As reliable bloomers they are often used as annuals...

Image of Begonia

James Burghardt

(Caribbean Corsair Begonia, Rhizomatous Begonia)

Adored for beautiful blooms and wildly colorful foliage, Begonia is one of the largest genera of flowering plants. There are over 1,500 species and more than 10,000 cultivars and hybrids. They are found all over the world but most originate from sub-tropical and tropical regions.

The plants come in many different forms. They are fleshy, herbaceous and may be annual or perennial. In habit, they can be shrubby, climbing, or epiphytic (tree-dwelling). The leaves are simple or compound...