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Results for
"IMPATIENS GLANDULIFERA 'RED WINE'"
(We couldn't find an exact match, but these are our best guesses)
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Family: Scrophulariaceae
Masses of ivory white-faced flowers with prominent yellow anthers spangle this shrubby Peruvian plant. A pleasant change from the common red one.
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Family: Alstroemeriaceae
These famous hybrids come in all shades of orange and red. The large, sumptuous flowers, resembling orchids, are easy to grow, and the clumps improve over the years making them an invaluable addition to every garden.
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Family: Amaranthaceae
Amaranthus 'Red Garnet' produces attractive, long, tassels in pillar-box red and green Amaranthus 'Pony Tails' produces exceptionally attractive, long, decorative tassels in pillar-box red and green shades, which gently swish from side to side in the Summer breeze. A long-time favourite , these superb colourful plants are ideal for adding height and interest to Summer bedding displays growing to a height of 90cm to 120cm. Originally a major food crop of the Incas they can indeed be eaten but look much nicer in your border!
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Family: Amaranthaceae
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Common name: Love-lies-bleeding
A selection of these lovely flowers bearing long, pendulous, flowing tails in many shades from green to red. These plants are often used to striking effect in many parks, gardens and stately homes.
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Family: Amaranthaceae
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Common name: Love-lies-bleeding
Red devil is a fast growing and extravagant annual plant with striking red veined stems and foliage that will quickly grow to a moderate height in the right position. To top it of deep red "pony tail" like flowers will protrude from the crown of the plant in mid to late summer hanging pendulously in impressive sprays of colour. Plant in moist well drained soil after the last frosts of spring.
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Family: Amaryllidaceae
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Common name: Amaryllis vittata
Seeds from the largest flowered amaryllis we have ever grown here. One potful had 20 absolutely gigantic blood-red flowers on multiple stems and the resulting bulbs double up yearly. If you pot on into larger and larger pots, when it flowers it will make people gasp! Seedlings should produce their first flowers in year 2 and bulbs will multiply and increase in size constantly in every subsequent year.
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Family: Primulaceae
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Common name: Scarlet Pimpernel
The lovely British native "Scarlet pimpernel" is too often overlooked, but closer inspection of the flower and seed capsule will reveals the fact that it is in fact in the primula family! Its stemless scarlet-red flowers appear over a very long succession all summer long. When allowed to naturalise in a hot place it will surpass many of the more common alpine plants, and it will even send out its long, leafy prostrate stems where others will not, such as on hot dry banks and rockeries.
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Family: Ranunculaceae
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Common name: Japanese Anemone, Anemone hupehensis japonica ‘Pamina’
Beautiful pink, semi-double flowers are balanced on well-branched deep red stems above a clump of mid-green vine-shaped leaves. An ideal plant for smaller gardens, it is easy to grow once established when the plants will spread to form a patch in a rich moist site. Shorter than many other anemone cultivars, it works well in smaller gardens or towards the middle of a border, and flowers from late summer well into autumn. Plants grown from these seeds may give a variety of forms and colours. Winner of a Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit (1997).
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Family: Iridaceae
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Common name: LAPEIROUSIA LAXA ALBA
This is the seldom-offered pure white form of this splendid lovely scree, rockery or pot plant. Most will be pure white although the odd one, if you're lucky, may have a red eye.
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Family: Iridaceae
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Common name: Freesia Joan Evans, Lapeirousia Joan Evans
This tiny bulbous plant, now sometimes called Freesia and once known as Laperousia, has pure white petals with an intriguing red eye, and is thus totally distinct from either the pure white or the pure red flowered form. It bulks up quite readily whether in a scree or a pot.
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Family: Leguminosae
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Common name: Kidney vetch, woundwort
This delightful plant must be one of the brightest and most colourful UK native species. With its silky, pinnate foliage and crowded heads of many small flowers, each with a woolly calyx, that although commonly yellow, can also be attractive shades of orange, red, purple or white. It should surely be worth a place in any garden, either in the border or rockery.
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Family: Plantaginaceae
Blooming from June until frost, this beautiful mix of delightful dwarf plants produces an abundance of sweetly scented blossoms in a wide variety of colours including reds, pinks, whites, and a host of others. This special diminutive variety is very early to flower and makes an ideal addition to any border. They are suitable for flower beds, garden pots, containers and flower boxes, as well as for the border and rock garden, and when used as small colourful islands can form a delightful looking mat of flowers.
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Family: Plantaginaceae
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Common name: Snapdragon
An easy to grow Snapdragon for beds and borders, performing well in full sun or semi-shade. With distinctive contrasting bi-colour, purple-red and white flowers (a colour way that is often referred to as a 'silver bi-colour'), the flower spikes are softly fragrant, long-lasting and make a great cut flower option.
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Family: Rosaceae
A delicious late-ripening apple originally discovered as a seedling growing on the large Penn Inn roundabout at the entrance to our market town of Newton Abbot in South Devon. Even on the poor rocky substrate, this tree produces a large crop of sizeable red-blushed golden apples, and seedlings may produce different fruit. These soft, sweet-fleshed fruits usually keep until December, by which time many other varieties will be well past their eat-by date.
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Family: Ranunculaceae
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Common name: Wild Columbine, Granny's Bonnets
An elegant and beautiful plant carrying sprays of deep red-spurred, lemon-yellow flowers. The bright cloud of blooms atop a patch of these is an unforgettable sight.
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