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This palm is native to the mountains of the small island of Guadalupe, off of the Western coast of Mexico. It is really endangered in habitat but it thrives in cultivation under a wide range of conditions. A perfect species for the Mediterranean.
Saturn peaches are smaller and flatter than a regular peach. Their skin is yellow and red, and they are usually less fuzzy than ordinary peaches. Their flesh is also a lot firmer, sweeter and more fragrant than a regular peach. The inside of the peach is pale in appearance.
NEW
Also known as 'Blanca de Aranjuez'. Spanish cultivar of excellent quality. It ripens in mid summer.More than 4 months keeping. Very productive, with an excellent taste and vigorous habit.
Attractive Crassula with gray leaves in opposite rows and clusters of white-pink flowers occur in Summer.
NEW!
This particular clone of Aechmea fasciata is a wild-type form with the tipical tiny teeth on the leaf margins. Aechmea fasciata is one of the most popular of all bromeliads. It tolerates a wide range of conditions, including some cold weather. Its large pink inflorescences are a true beauty - only comparable to those of the most tropical, tender types.
NEW! Hard to find traditional variety of fig from the Canary Islands
3-4 years old. 30 cm tall. 3-4 cm base. Blue green leaves come up straight from the top of the stem, perfectly spaced, at odd-angles. This endangered cycad is a "micro-endemic", known only from the Tomellin Canyon in Oaxaca, Mexico, at 1,000 to 1,500 m asl.
This new palm was described in from southern Ryukyu Islands of Japan. It is similar to the beautiful Arenga engleri from Taiwan but it is probably more cold-tolerant. It is also smaller, with shorter and thicker stems, to 2m and 20cm diameter, and leaves to just 2m long. Slow, but frost-resistant, to about -7 C!
Evergreen South American bulb. The cultivar 'Alberto Castillo', has white, larger flowers and was collected in the 1980s by Alberto Castillo, the owner of Ezeiza Botanical Garden, from an abandoned garden in Buenos Aires.
This species is native to scelerophyll forests in San Luis Potosi in Mexico. It usually grows as a solitary rosette of a different green, with smooth, narrow, channeled leaves. It blooms every summer with lemon yellow flowers.
Livistona fulva is a palm species, restricted in distribution to the Blackdown Tablelands in central Queensland, Australia. Livistona fulva is a tall solitary palm. In nature, it grows in open forests; in cultivation. it prefers a warm temperate climate and sunny position.
Ipheion uniflorum is a free-blooming evergreen bulb from Argentina and Uruguay, with leaves smelling like garlic.
Winter growing buln, native to sandy plains, each bulb bears two leaves. In February it produces showy spikes of sessile pink and purple flowers. It slowly clumps and will fill the pot in 3 or 5 years.
No common name is enough for this bulb, which bears one of the most beautiful flowers on Earth. It is the showiest of the genus Lilium but it stands out because of its perfect adaptation to mediterranean climates: it sprouts a new rosettes in autumn, and keeps growing through the winter until it blooms and dies back to ground in early summer.