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  2. For a Hardy, Low-Maintenance Flower, Grow Perennial Geraniums

    www.aol.com/hardy-low-maintenance-flower-grow...

    Perennial geraniums thrive in most soil conditions and are an easy-to-grow, low-maintenance plant that produces pretty flowers in the spring and summer.

  3. Geranium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geranium

    Geranium is a genus of 422 species of annual, biennial, and perennial plants that are commonly known as geraniums or cranesbills. They are found throughout the temperate regions of the world and the mountains of the tropics, with the greatest diversity in the eastern part of the Mediterranean region .

  4. Pelargonium × hortorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelargonium_×_hortorum

    The specific epithet hortorum is a genitive plural form of the Latin "hortus" ("garden") and therefore corresponds to "horticultural".The name was created by the American botanist Liberty Hyde Bailey who in 1914, writes "The large number of forms of the common geranium, derives from the variation and probably the crossing of P. zonale and P. inquinans (and possibly others) during more than a ...

  5. Pelargonium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelargonium

    Pelargonium (/ ˌ p ɛ l ɑːr ˈ ɡ oʊ n i. ə m /) [5] is a genus of flowering plants that includes about 280 species of perennials, succulents, and shrubs, [4] commonly called geraniums, pelargoniums, or storksbills. Geranium is also the botanical name and common name of a separate genus of related plants, also known as cranesbills.

  6. Geraniaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geraniaceae

    Geraniaceae is a family of flowering plants placed in the order Geraniales.The family name is derived from the genus Geranium.The family includes both the genus Geranium (the cranesbills, or true geraniums) and the garden plants called geraniums, which modern botany classifies as genus Pelargonium, along with other related genera.

  7. Geranium sanguineum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geranium_sanguineum

    The genus name is derived from the Greek γέρανος ("géranos"), meaning crane, with reference to the fruit capsule resembling the bird's bill.The specific Latin name sanguineum means 'blood-red'; Linnaeus cites Gaspard Bauhin's 1623 book Pinax theatri botanici as his source for the name, which in turn refers ("sanguinaria radix") to a blood-red root.