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This species does not long survive south of Z8 in the southeastern US. The consensus is that it's the combination of high humidity and su...Read More
Another brilliant wind resister and an incredibly easy one to divide for planting elsewhere in your windbreak, just get that shovel in an...Read More
New Zealand Flax (Phormium tenax) is ideally suited to growing on seacliffs, in a natural setting, or as a filler in a large area. This f...Read More
Grows very well here in the San Francisco Bay Area. We have frosts every winter and rare temperature drops into the mid to upper 20s, and...Read More
A previous owner of my property planted upwards of 5 or 6 in a side yard, meaning that a decade later I have the privilege of seeing them...Read More
After being bombarded w/ these on the TV garden shows, they have finally started to appear in small quantities here in Cincinnati.
...Read More
Family name may be listed as Agavaceae or Phormiaceae, Giant New Zealand Flax has olive green foliage and can reach 6-10' high. Very eas...Read More
Here in zone 9 coastal Nor. CA. many local nurseries offer the P. tenax hybrids, which are more brightly colored and smaller, better size...Read More
An evergreen clump forming plant from New Zealand.
Has lancelike-sword shaped, upright, rigid, dark green leaves. Bears lo...Read More