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Lovely green foliage with irregular white margins provides year-round interest. Fragrant white flowers start in the late summer and continue into the fall.
Grown for its massive red-splashed leaves, Zebrina Rojo grows quickly in the ground or in large containers.
A prolific bloomer all summer long, even in its first year. Reliable perennial, returns each year for another spectacular performance.
A popular English lavender, growing to two feet tall and about as wide. Tall flower spikes are a purplish blue.
When the flowers first open, they resemble gerbera daisies, then develop that characteristic coneflower "eye" as it matures.
Fresh green foliage tinged with red is topped with deep purple flower spikes from late spring and into the fall.
This succulent-like evergreen thrives with benign neglect. In other words, don't over-water, don't over-fertilize, and this will be a happy camper.
This sunny yellow flower will keep blooming right up until frost, and will return the following spring for a repeat performance.
The more sun, the more flowers this candytuft produces. The evergreen foliage may be obscured by all the flower caps!
This is indeed a graceful conifer with airy foliage and pendulous branches. At maturity, it can reach 50 feet in height and spread 25 feet.
Absolutely gorgeous clusters of rich blue, double flowers nestled in a rosette of broad textured leaves, and they're fragrant too!
Cute-as-a-button flowers start in the spring and if you pluck off spent blooms, will continue on into summer. Strawberries & Cream is an adorable mixture of light and dark pinks.
This English daisy flower is fluffier and larger than the Tasso series, with narrow quilled petals in shades of red, pink, and white.
Intense, single-petaled flowers often blanket the foliage for several weeks, bringing a pop of color to sunny container planters, borders, and hanging baskets.
The biennial English Daisy Speedstar mix blooms in the first year, sending up semi-double daisies in red, pink, and white.
This agave may outlive the gardener that is growing it. Legend has it that it blooms only once in 100 years, thus the common name of century plant.
Lime green flower bracts with dotted black and yellow eyes liven up the gray-green foliage in the spring. A startling contrast!
For those with mixed feelings about pink flowers, how about a cheery, wine/pink cyclamen? Paired with the variegated leaves - stunning!
For those gardeners starved for bright colors after making it through winter, feast on this gorgeous scarlet windflower!
Cheery red berries brighten the darkest days of winter. Animal-friendly berries taste like wintergreen - the birds love 'em!
A fragrant hedge or planted in a container on the patio, you'll love the dense, shiny foliage of this evergreen gardenia.
This dwarf Norway spruce forms an almost perfect pyramidal shape in its maturity, but that could take a long while.
Tan buds stand out against blue-tinted needles in the fall. Growing only one inch per year, this conifer is perfect for small spaces.
Shorter than its cousins, and a longer bloomer too. Its size and blooming power make it perfect for container planters.