When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: cool orange flowers

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Butterflies Absolutely Love These Orange Flowers

    www.aol.com/butterflies-absolutely-love-orange...

    This perennial has the cutest button-like orange flowers dancing on long stems. Geum bloom in the spring but have lovely, dense foliage the rest of the season. Liudmyla Liudmyla - Getty Images

  3. Masdevallia davisii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masdevallia_davisii

    Masdevallia davisii is grown cool and blooms in the late spring with a single brilliant yellow flower, usually deep orange inside. The 6.5 to 9 cm flowers hold themselves high and appear successively on an erect, slender peduncle, 25 cm long. [3] The flowers' predominant feature is their thickly textured and well-developed sepals, which end in ...

  4. Oreomecon nudicaulis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oreomecon_nudicaulis

    Cultivars come in shades of yellow, orange, salmon, rose, pink, cream and white as well as bi-colored varieties. Seed strains include: 'Champagne Bubbles' (15-inch plants in orange, pink, scarlet, apricot, yellow, and creamy-white); 'Wonderland' (10-inch dwarf strain with flowers up to 4 inches wide); 'Flamenco' (pink shades, bordered white, 1 1 ⁄ 2 to 2 feet tall); 'Party Fun' (to 1 foot ...

  5. Philadelphus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philadelphus

    Philadelphus (/ ˌ f ɪ l ə ˈ d ɛ l f ə s / [2]) (mock-orange) is a genus of about 60 species of shrubs from 3–20 ft (1–6 m) tall, native to North America, Central America, Asia and (locally) in southeast Europe.

  6. Safflower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safflower

    Plants are 30 to 150 cm (12 to 59 in) tall with globular flower heads having yellow, orange, or red flowers. Each branch will usually have from one to five flower heads containing 15 to 20 seeds per head. Safflower is native to arid environments having seasonal rain. It grows a deep taproot which enables it to thrive in such environments.

  7. Agoseris aurantiaca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agoseris_aurantiaca

    The florets are most commonly orange but are occasionally yellow, pink, red, or purple. "Aurantiaca" means "orange-red". [4]: 111 The flower head matures into a ball-like head of beaked achenes, each with a terminal pappus of numerous, white bristles. [5] It is the only orange-flowered species in the genus, the others typically being yellow. [3]