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Horticulture at Saskatoon's Forestry Farm Park
... -6 m (15 to 20 ft) in height, it has a distinctive weeping habit, and is covered in white blooms in the spring. Below it are found a mugo pine, a wonderful creeping juniper, and a tamarisk juniper. A little leaf linden completes the setting. As you leave the washroom area, you enter the main lawn area, where some of the oldest and largest specimens are to be found: an enormous tamarack, mugo pines ...
gardenline.usask.ca

A trip through the Richtersveld
... particular the summits. The valleys beyond and the mountains near the Orange river are far drier and have a very scant vegetation Travel log We spend our first night on the windy campsite Potjiespram, just a Tamarisk bush on the river bank, tired from the long drive all the way from Ai-Ais in Namibia. The shepherd's dog watching us from the bushes all night. The next morning we followed the track ...
users.skynet.be/fb235353

UCJEPS: Jepson Manual Treatment Indexes
... Quassia Or Simarouba Family SIMMONDSIACEAE Jojoba Family SOLANACEAE Nightshade Family STAPHYLEACEAE Bladdernut Family STERCULIACEAE Cacao Family STYRACACEAE Storax Family TAMARICACEAE Tamarisk Family THYMELAEACEAE Mezereum Family TROPAEOLACEAE Nasturtium Family ULMACEAE Elm Family URTICACEAE Nettle Family VALERIANACEAE Valerian Family VERBENACEAE Vervain Family VIOLACEAE Violet ...
ucjeps.berkeley.edu

Myrica cerifera, southern wax-myrtle
... . Distribution: Eastern Texas, east to Florida, north to New Jersey. In Oklahoma restricted to southeastern McCurtain County. Habitat: moist, sandy soils. Comments: Myrica is the classical name for tamarisk (an unrelated tree); cerifera refers to the waxy fruits. Horticulture: a popular ornamental that first entered cultivation in 1699. Wax-mrytle can be propagated by seeds, cuttings, and layering ...
www.biosurvey.ou.edu

Tamarix
... and require pruning immediately after flowers have faded. Late-Summer flowering species produce flowers on wood produced earlier in the season and should not be pruned back until late winter. Many Tamarisk bonsai are styled with weeping foliage and this requires wiring downwards as it grows. Propagation: Take hardwood cuttings in winter or semi-ripe cuttings in summer. Air layer in late spring. ...
www.bonsai-bci.com

Denver Botanic Gardens
... to investigate the best ways to get rid of the tamarisk and to restore the land after it is removed. Tamarisk integrated pest management (IPM): With funding from the Environmental Protection ... result in the first handbook of best management practices for this pervasive weed. Revegetation of tamarisk land: With funding from the Bureau of Reclamation, we are conducting greenhouse studies to determine ...
www.botanicgardens.org

Denver Botanic Gardens
... . Dr. Sher also directs the Applied Plant Conservation Training Program, a collaborative institute with the US Botanic Gardens. Her current research focuses on the restoration of native ecosystems after tamarisk control. Nick Snakenberg, Curator of Orchids Nick Snakenberg has been working at Denver Botanic Gardens since 1993 in an array of capacities. A graduate of Iowa State University with a ...
www.botanicgardens.org
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CalFlora Common Name Index T
... lessingia Three Peaks jewel-flower Torrey Eucrypta Tulare County rock cress Tamalpais manzanita Three Peaks jewelflower Torrey maple Tulare County rockcress tamarack three-awn Torrey melic Tulare cryptantha Tamarisk three-bracted loosestrife Torrey pine Tulare gooseberry Tanbark Oak three-bracted onion Torrey's blazing star Tulare saltbush Tangier pea three-cornered leek Torrey's blazingstar tule ...
www.calflora.org

Shrubs for Coastal Landscapes
... Cornus florida Dogwood, Tatarian Cornus alba Dogwood, Gray Cornus racemosa Dogwood, Red twig Cornus stolonifera Elaeagnus, Autumn Elaeagnus umbellata Eleagnus, Thorny Elaeagnus pungens French tamarisk Tamarix gallica Holly, Dahoon Ilex cassine Honeysuckle, Tatarian Lonicera tatarica Honeysuckle, Box Lonicera nitida Horse sugar Symplocos tinctoria Oak, Bluejack Quercus incana Pepperbush, Sweet ...
www.ces.ncsu.edu

Just our Pictures of the California Desert: Anza-Borrego & Joshua Tree
... drove on toward the more remote parts of the park. The good advice of a wacky yacky ranger at Tamarisk campground steered me toward some southern canyon 4WD routes which went deep into the Carrizo Badlands. So some ... which is to be restored as the visitor center for the Scenic Area. I made coffee under the tamarisk trees to fortify for the long night's drive coming up. With the last of daylight, I ...
www.justourpictures.com




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