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Results for
"IMPATIENS GLANDULIFERA 'RED WINE'/1000"
(We couldn't find an exact match, but these are our best guesses)
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Family: Caryophyllaceae
A lovely colour-break from the normally pale pink, and exceptionally lovely dwarf, the 'Cheddar Pink', which is now an extremely rare British native. A spreading carpet of thin grey leaves, no more than an inch or two tall, is studded with very fragrant bright red flowers throughout spring. It thrives best on a rock garden or in a well-drained spot!
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Family: Caryophyllaceae
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Common name: Carthusian Pink
This perennial sprouts tufts of grey-green, grass-like leaves, above which, from mid-summer to early autumn, it bears clusters of delicate, pink-red scented flowers on upright, wiry stems.
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Family: Caryophyllaceae
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Common name: DIANTHUS DANCING GEISHA
This superb and extremely unusual form of pink has two distinctive features. The petals, which come in shades from deepest red, palest pink, and even white, are deeply and delicately slashed into countless thousands of thin wavy fronds, producing an incredible effect when the clump is in full flower. But the most overwhelming and instantly noticeable aspect is the perfume. Very few of this famous family can compete with the constant production of sweet scent over a long season of bloom. Produces very few good seeds. Seeds collected produce multiple flower colours.
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Common name: chinese pink
A taller variety of pink (aka chinese pink) which produces an abundence of frilly petalled flowers, which in this mixture come in a variety of shades and patterns from red through to pink. A reliable but also short lived variety that we recommend treating as an annual. Suitable for many situations be that in a border or taller schemed container.
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Family: Caryophyllaceae
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Common name: Maiden Pink white
This is the unusual pure white form of the fragrant " Maiden Pink". It will gently self-seed if happy and always produces white seedlings unless near to other red forms with which it may hybridise.
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Family: Caryophyllaceae
Another alpine gem from the alpine meadows of Albania with a dense carpet of short, pointed, grey-green leaves, and bearing inch flowers of a most brilliant red-purple. Very hardy and long-lived whether grown in a pot or a rockery.
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Family: Papaveraceae
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Common name: Bleeding heart, Squirrel corn, Dutchmans breeches
A fascinating, rapid-growing annual climber which will often self-seed. Rapidly-ascending, twining stems carry a summer-long succession of yellow lockets.These grow into absolutely amazing large seed-pods resembling wrinkled red sausages!
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Family: Iridaceae
Seed collected from plants of this old cultivar originally selected at Broadleigh Gardens. Relatively short strong stems terminate in unusually large pendent flowers in a wide range of reds, purples and mauves.
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Family: Iridaceae
This brilliant new hybrid is the brightest deep red seedling we have discovered for many years. Plants grown from these seeds may vary but they will produce heavy heads of pendulous flowers in some startlingly bright new forms.
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Family: Iridaceae
Fiery bunches of flared, tomato-red flowers make an impressive display on this diminutive introduction from South Africa. This is a choice and very hardy plant which is vigorous and quick to clump up.
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Family: Iridaceae
An absolutely unique dwarf hardy dierama from the high African mountains. Pauciflorum literally means "few flowered", but what flowers they are! Delightful stubby-stemmed red-pink bells look out or upwards, unlike other pendulous dieramas, and, because of their alpine ancestry, bloom in spring well before the buds appear on other species.
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Family: Iridaceae
This late flowering (August) alpine Dierama is one of the most stunning of this genus. On arching stems, the starkly-contrasting white bracts show off the pendulous deepest wine red flowers to perfection. The true species is rarely offered.
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Family: Iridaceae
Bred here at Plant World, these new and exciting dwarf "Angels' Fishing Rods" will be gems in everyone's garden, their arching stems carrying pretty pendent bells in a variety of colours ranging from red through to pale purple. To produce these new plants we crossed two different dwarf dieramas resulting in plants which are all small, have masses of flowers, and are also very hardy. Their parents, two alpine dieramas, came from high in the Drakensberg Mountains of South Africa!
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Family: Primulaceae
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Common name: SHOOTING STARS
These sprays of distinctive swept-back petals give this flower its common name of "Shooting Stars", resembling tiny cyclamen flowers on primula stems (and related to both). The clusters of flowers are held on strong stems above clumps of fleshy tongue-shaped leaves.
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Family: Sapindaceae
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Common name: Hopbush, Candlewood, Switchsorrel, Wedge Leaf Hopbush, Hopwood, Hopshrub, Dodonaea cuneata
This lovely, long-leafed shrub produces shiny leaves, whilst the flowers of this tree mature into attractive winged fruits which become red or purple as they mature, making it a popular garden plant in warmer areas. It has a wide distribution of areas where it will thrive, from subtropical to warm temperate region. The wood is unusually tough and durable and the Maori of New Zealand have used it to fashion clubs and other weapons, the Maori name for the shrub, akeake, meaning "forever and ever"
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