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Dried Flower/Foliage Plants

Success! The following plants match your search request. We've included all matches below. Click on any plant to learn additional details.

Basil Greek

Basil Greek

Annual
  • Compact, mounded shape with very small, highly flavoured & fragrant leaves and tiny white whorls of flowers
  • Use leaves fresh or dried to enhance tomato dishes and in other cooking
  • The leaves of Greek basil are more stronger in flavour then other basils
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Basil Red

Basil Red

Annual
  • Red Rubin basil features striking, large leaves that are deep purple-red in color
  • It is an ornamental variety of basil that also has culinary uses
  • A little stronger flavour then sweet basil, great for salads and garnish
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Basil Sweet

Basil Sweet

Annual
  • Sweet basil is a large-leaved Italian type that is glorious for pesto
  • Seeds produce vigorous plants that grow big, mid-green leaves all summer long
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Basil Thai

Basil Thai

Annual
  • Easy-to-grow culinary herb with bright green leaves, dark purple stems, and tiny, pale purple flowers
  • Edible leaves are traditionally used in Southeast Asian cuisines and offer a spicy, licorice-like flavor and aroma
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Chamomile

Chamomile

Perennial
  • This bushy plant have a light and airy feeling
  • Featherly looking leaves
  • Flowers have large disks surrounded by white petals
  • Great for teas, it can cause a calming and can promote sleepiness
  • Warning; If allergic to ragweed you may also be allergic to chamomile
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Dill

Dill

Annual
  • Upright, light and airy with blue green leaves that are thread like with a satiny sheen
  • Yellow-green flowers
  • Leaves and seeds used to flavour soups, cheese and a varity of mixed dishes as well as dill pickles
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Hydrangea Arborescens Annabelle

Hydrangea Arborescens Annabelle

Smooth Hydrangea
  • Stunning white flower clusters bloom all summer
  • Plants will form substantial hedges
  • Pruning always wait until flowers have visibly faded before pruning them
  • Late winter or very early spring, before last year's stems start to leaf out
  • A complete renewal pruning of an Annabelle Hydrangea plant involves removing the oldest stalks down to ground level
  • Just before spring, prune any stems sticking above the surface of the ground to encourage growth as sunlight strengthens
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Hydrangea Arborescens Incrediball

Hydrangea Arborescens Incrediball

Smooth Hydrangea
  • Massive flowers bloom in summer
  • The flowers are held upright on very sturdy stems
  • Very hardy and reliable
  • Prune Late fall once the plant is dormant if you don't want to keep its flowers for winter interest
  • We typically prune them in early spring so we can enjoy those blooms as long as possible
  • Cut the branches back by about 1/3 of their total length
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Hydrangea Arborescens Incrediball Blush

Hydrangea Arborescens Incrediball Blush

Smooth Hydrangea
  • Soft pink blooms which turn green with maturity
  • These should get a minimum of 6 hours a day of sunlight for the best performance
  • Pruning Incrediball Blush Hydrangeas is really easy as well
  • Do this in early spring, as the new growth begins to emerge on the stems
  • Cut back ? of the length of the branch
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Hydrangea Arborescens Invincibelle Spirit

Hydrangea Arborescens Invincibelle Spirit

Dwarf Smooth Hydrangea
  • Pink flowered, mop-head form
  • Flower buds are produced on new wood
  • Remove any dead flowers still on the plant, along with any thin, spindly growth and any very old and woody growth
  • Pruning is not imperative but it can encourage stronger stems and a more attractive overall form
  • You can remove up to one-third of the plant's total height if you'd like
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Hydrangea Arborescens Invincibelle Wee Wee White

Hydrangea Arborescens Invincibelle Wee Wee White

Dwarf Smooth Hydrangea
  • White blooms age pink and green
  • Pruning is very simple, cut the branches back by about a ? of the length
  • This helps promote the growth of more flowers, and also helps the stems become stronger.
  • Prune in Early Spring just before new growth starts to appear
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Hydrangea Macrophylla Endless Summer BloomStruck

Hydrangea Macrophylla Endless Summer BloomStruck

Mophead Hydrangea
  • Repeat blooms truly offer gardeners an endless summer of incredible color
  • Large, rounded clusters of flowers
  • Late fall when flowers are completely finished
  • Cut your hydrangeas back to about one foot from the ground by making an angled away from the bud
  • Pruning the center slightly taller will help achieve a nice shape
  • If any branches are crossing one of these branches should be removed
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Hydrangea Paniculata Bobo

Hydrangea Paniculata Bobo

Dwarf Panicle Hydrangea
  • White blooms
  • Bobo does not require regular pruning, as it has a naturally dense and compact form
  • If you want to prune it for shape as a hedge shrub, do so in early spring or late winter before new growth has started
  • Simply prune the tips of the branches to form the shape desired
  • This plant blooms on current year wood, so pruning too late in the spring will compromise the flower production for that year
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Hydrangea Paniculata Grandiflora

Hydrangea Paniculata Grandiflora

Panicle Hydrangea
  • Large clusters of white blooms in summer
  • Foliage turns bronze and pink in the fall
  • prune immediately after flowering.
  • Pee Gee hydrangeas offer a bit more flexibility, but in general, they should be pruned in early spring before new growth appears
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Hydrangea Paniculata Limelight

Hydrangea Paniculata Limelight

Panicle Hydrangea
  • Huge, chartreuse green-white
  • Blooms age to an array of pink, red, and burgundy
  • Simply cut off ? of the total height of the shrub. Prune your Limelight in late winter or early spring, before new growth emerges
  • Because this shrub blooms on new wood, you do not want to potentially cut off any flower buds for the upcoming season
  • You can also trim off any dead or sick branches during the year as needed
  • Pruning this shrub helps the plant grow a strong base with upright branches that are strong enough to hold all of the large flower heads
  • It also encourages the plant to put more energy towards growing flowers that flourish from June to September
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Hydrangea Paniculata Little Lamb

Hydrangea Paniculata Little Lamb

Panicle Hydrangea
  • Small delicate white blooms turn pink in fall
  • Remove only spent flowers and dead, damaged or unsightly wood
  • Blooms on new wood, prune in late winter or early spring
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Hydrangea Paniculata Little Lime

Hydrangea Paniculata Little Lime

Dwarf Panicle Hydrangea
  • Green Flower that turn pink in fall
  • Excellent for the mixed border or foundation plantings
  • Unlike many hydrangeas that bloom on old wood and should be pruned after flowering,
  • Little Lime' blooms on new wood and should be trimmed to the preferred size and shape in late winter or early spring before new growth emerges
  • The later you prune, the later that 'Little Lime' can produce flowers
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Hydrangea Paniculata Pink Diamond

Hydrangea Paniculata Pink Diamond

Panicle Hydrangea Standard
  • Light Pink-white blooms
  • Prune hard in late spring to encourage long shoots with big flowers.
  • The admonition "prune until you think you have killed it, and then prune some more" applies to this fast growing shrub
  • It is resistant to most insect and disease problems
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Hydrangea Paniculata Pinky Winky

Hydrangea Paniculata Pinky Winky

Panicle Hydrangea
  • White blooms turning pink
  • Spectacular two-toned flower panicles
  • Flowers on new wood, which means the time to do your size-control and shaping pruning is end of winter
  • Late March to early April just before the plant grows new leaves
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Hydrangea Paniculata Vanilla Strawberry

Hydrangea Paniculata Vanilla Strawberry

Panicle Hydrangea
  • Blooms start out creamy vanilla white changing to a soft pink then a strawberry red as it matures
  • Remove old stems and deadhead spent blooms so that the plant can use its energy and nutrients to promote new growth
  • To control shrub size, prune in late winter (flowers on new wood), before new growth appears
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