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  • … ranges from threadlike to willow-like and looks attractive throughout the growing season with the bonus of good to outstanding yellow to gold fall color. Species may vary in plant size …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant
  • … ranges from threadlike to willow-like and looks attractive throughout the growing season with the bonus of good to outstanding yellow to gold fall color. Species may vary in plant size …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant
  • … (Pa Kua) and Yiquan system. Select this advanced-level course if you are experienced with the movements and practice of the Sun form and have previously taken tai chi classes at the …
    Type: Item Detail
  • … and gentle postures. Refine the traditional Sun-style. Learn traditional Sun-style tai chi with focus on fundamental principles and basic footwork. Ease into the form by learning sections …
    Type: Item Detail
  • … of its flower buds: each one consists of a slender 4-inch-long, trumpet-shaped tube that ends with a flattened, oval-shaped club resembling a soprano-range eighth note. The club portion of …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant
  • … name suggests, dark red bracts surround the non-showy yellow true flowers and contrast well with the rich dark green foliage. Poinsettias will retain their colorful bracts under even the …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant
  • … of hummingbirds. The plant's deep green, triangular lanceolate leaves are ornamented with white spots in transverse bands. This succulent can tolerate some shade and is found in …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant
  • … Eremurus stenophyllus , or Bunge desert candle, sends up a spike to 3.5 feet tall with hundreds of yellow flowers from a rosette of foliage that resembles yucca (without the sharp …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant
  • … can be found in the wild in most counties in Illinois. It is a large multi-stemmed shrub with a tendency to spread and colonize. The bark of older stems is gray (hence its common name) …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant
  • … includes at least 90 species of shrubs native to the temperate regions of Europe and Asia, with a concentration in western China. There are no cotoneasters native to the U.S., though a …
    Type: Garden Guide Plant