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  2. This Easy-To-Care-For Shrub Provides Stunning Yellow ... - AOL

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    Mahonias are stately shrubs beloved for their easy care and adaptability. They provide striking architecture in the landscape and gorgeous color throughout the year, from yellow winter blooms to ...

  3. Beautiful Small Shrubs for Outdoor Spaces of Any Size - AOL

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    The bright yellow blooms of forsythia appear in early spring before the shrub leafs out. New hybrids such as Show Off! Sugar Baby stay petite and pretty in small spaces, reaching about 30 inches ...

  4. Will Euonymus Grow Indoors Year-Round? How to Keep This Shrub ...

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    Also known as Japanese euonymus (E. japonicus), these evergreen shrubs are native to Japan and Korea. Outdoors, they can reach 10-15 feet tall or more, but indoors, they will be limited by pot size.

  5. Tecoma stans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tecoma_stans

    Tecoma stans is a semi-evergreen shrub or small tree, growing up to 10 m (30 ft) tall. [1] It features opposite odd-pinnate green leaves, with 3 to 13 serrate, 8- to 10-cm-long leaflets. The leaflets, glabrous on both sides, have a lanceolate blade 2–10 cm long and 1–4 cm wide, with a long acuminate apex and a wedge-shaped base.

  6. Artemisia tridentata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artemisia_tridentata

    Big sagebrush is a coarse, many-branched, pale-grey shrub with yellow flowers and silvery-grey foliage, which is generally 0.5–3 metres (1 + 1 ⁄ 2 –10 feet) tall. [3] A deep taproot 1–4 m (3 + 1 ⁄ 2 –13 ft) in length, coupled with laterally spreading roots near the surface, allows sagebrush to gather water from both surface precipitation and the water table several meters beneath.

  7. Psidium guajava - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psidium_guajava

    Psidium guajava, the common guava, [2] yellow guava, [2] lemon guava, [2] or apple guava is an evergreen shrub or small tree native to the Caribbean, Central America and South America. [2] It is easily pollinated by insects; when cultivated, it is pollinated mainly by the common honey bee, Apis mellifera.