Dwarf fothergilla www.fothergilla.com2014-11-14http://www.fothergilla.com tomentose beneath. Size 2 to 3 foot in height, similar or greater in spread. Some specimens have achieved between 6 and 10 feet in height. Hardiness Zone 4 5 to 8 9. For an idea of your plant zone please visit the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map. Habit Small shrub with slender, crooked, often spreading branches, rounded in outline; forms a rather dense mound at maturity; suckers, some plants more so than others; and forms colonies.
Swamp white oak www.swampwhiteoak.com2014-11-14http://www.swampwhiteoak.com tomentose or grayish green and velvety beneath. Size 50 to 60 feet in height with an equal or greater spread. Hardiness Zone 3 to 8. For an idea of your plant zone please visit the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map. Habit It forms a broad, open, round.topped crown and a short, limby trunk. Rate Slow to medium. Flowers Monoecious, appearing on the old or new growth; staminate catkins pendent, clustered; individual flowers comprising a
Oakleaf hydrangea www.oakleafhydrangea.com2014-11-14http://www.oakleafhydrangea.com tomentose beneath. Leaves change to shades of red, orangish brown in the fall. Size 4 to 6 feet in height; spread as wide and wider as it suckers from roots. Hardiness Zone 5 to 9. For an idea of your plant zone please visit the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map. Habit Upright, little branched, irregular, stoloniferous shrub forming mounded colonies. Rate Slow to medium. Flowers White, changing to purplish pink and finally tannish
Seinet. berberis swbiodiversity.org2013-03-04http://swbiodiversity.org/seinet/taxa/index.php?taxon=berberis tomentose stems. Rhizomes present or absent, short or long, not nodose. Stems branched or unbranched, monomorphic or dimorphic, i.e., all elongate or with elongate primary stems and short axillary spur shoots. Leaves alternate, sometimes leaves of elongate shoots reduced to spines and foliage leaves borne only on short shoots; foliage leaves simple or 1.odd.pinnately compound; petioles usually present. Simple leaves blade narrowly
The fremontodendreae pages www.malvaceae.info2011-08-27http://www.malvaceae.info/genera/fremontodendreae/fremontodendreae.php tomentose , woody capsules. The species was long known to science from a single specimen in an ancient cultivated setting in central Mexico, outside the natural distribution. There was a superstition that it was divinely limited to a single specimen. It was also used in traditional Mexican medicine. Cultivation Chiranthodendron pentadactylon is said to be able to tolerate 5 C of frost. It should be grown in full sun, in a