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lindaleinen.com
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| | | | A healthy lizard tail colony at Armand Bayou The plant known as lizard's tail (Saururus cernuus) often is found in lightly shaded wetlands, although it thrives in many periodically flooded areas such as shallow ponds, swamps, and slow-moving streams. Spreading through underground runners, it's expanded to fill a large, low area around the Armand Bayou... | |
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lindaleinen.com
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| | | | False indigo on the Brazoria Refuge prairie in mid-March False indigo, or Baptisia, is a genus native to North America. A member of the pea family, its common name is a result of the plants' resemblance to Indigofera tinctoria, a source of blue dye for Native Americans and others. Although Baptisia doesn't produce dye, it's... | |
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gardeninacity.com
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| | | | Now that I have the taxonomy issue out of my system (see last post), I can write about the asters in my garden. (As hillwards points out, "They may not be Asters any more, but they will always be asters ..."). All the asters I grow except for one are Midwest USA natives and straight... | |
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theredeemedgardener.blogspot.com
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| | Well, I've started harvesting potatoes here in West Virginia! This is a new type for me, we planted "fingerlings" alone with the old stand... |