Yahoo Poland Wyszukiwanie w Internecie

Search results

  1. Black Sage is a native California beach sage that has highly aromatic pebbled leaves and pale blue flowers in late winter. It makes a great addition to our Zone 8-11 Fragrant Garden Six Pack. This plant is sometimes available in plug trays. These trays hold 128 of all the same plant.

  2. Salvia mellifera (Black Sage) is a semi-evergreen, openly branched and spreading, woody shrub with very aromatic foliage of wrinkled, dark green leaves, 1-3 in. long (2-7 cm), with paler undersides. It is semi-deciduous, depending on the location and severity of the drought.

  3. Buy The Best Salvia & Sage Plants For Sale Online With Free Shipping From Wilson Bros Gardens. With our safe shipping, low prices, larger plants and expert planting advice you'll be growing Salvia plants like the pros...

  4. Black sage is a dominant species among the coastal sage plant community throughout California in both inland and coastal habitats, and is considered to be one of the best western native honey plants. It grows in habitats ranging from coastal bluffs to inland foothills, from northern to southern California and Baja California, where it is very ...

  5. Sage is a shrubby, perennial plant that grows to about 2-3 feet tall. Foliage is gray-green with a pebbly texture. As it ages, it has a tendency to sprawl. Spikes of purple flowers appear in mid-summer. Growing: Perennial.

  6. This low-growing shrub produces a small 5' by 5' span and beautiful light-blue to white flowers that attract many species of hummingbird, bees, and butterlies. Quail are fond of the seeds. The shrub can handle soils that are difficult to grow in. Its evergreen leaves are fragrant.

  7. Sage is a hardy herb that thrives in well-drained soil and full sun exposure. In Illinois, the ideal soil pH for cultivating sage is between 6.0 and 7.0, which is slightly acidic to neutral. The best time to plant sage in Illinois is in the early spring, after the last frost has passed.

  1. Ludzie szukają również