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Nipponanthemum nipponicum, commonly called "Nippon daisy" or "Montauk daisy," is a plant species native to coastal regions of Japan but cultivated as an ornamental in other regions. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] It is now naturalized as an escapee along seashores in New York and New Jersey .
Plant the bulbs in fall for flowers in late winter or very early spring. They will return for many years in full sun to partial shade. Taras Halay / 500px - Getty Images
Engelmannia peristenia, called Engelmann daisy or cutleaf daisy, is a North American species of flowering plants in the family Asteraceae.It is native to the south-central United States, primarily from Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and southeastern Colorado, but with more isolated populations in Arizona, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and South Dakota.
Many times, I have seen people say they have to have a loropetalum. I get it. They come in a nice 3-gallon container with pretty burgundy leaves and these amazing pink flowers.
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The flower heads are white with yellow centers, with rays that are white to pale lavender, borne spring through fall depending on the individual plant. [7] Ray florets number 40 to 100. [ 3 ]
Peduncles are 3–10 cm long; involucres are campanulate to hemispherical, about 1 cm high; chaffy bracts are lanceolate, rigid. The flowers are bright yellow ray florets of about 8-13 per head, rays are 6–15 mm long; disk-corollas 4–5 mm long. The pappus is a crown of short fimbriate scales. The seeds are tuberculate achenes, 4
The ray florets are mauve, pink or white and are 7 to 10 mm long. The main flowerering season is early autumn to mid winter, but the daisy-like flowerheads may appear throughout the year. Flowering occurs from March to June and the fruit is a wedge-shaped achene, brown to black, swollen, 1.9–2.4 mm (0.075–0.094 in) long, smooth and warty ...