Plants

Agastache
The Acapulco agastache series from Bodger Botanicals is suited for containers, window boxes and the landscape. The series contains five colors: Orange, Rose, Gold, Salmon & Pink and White & Yellow. The flowers and leaves produce a mint scent that enhances the plant's appeal. As plants mature, they form a round mass of foliage and flowers. The silver-toned foliage reflects the sun making it stand out. Acapulcos reach 18 inches tall in containers and 14 inches tall in the garden. In the landscape,...
 

 

Advertiser events
Dont Let High Temperatures Dry up Your Profits. If you are experiencing high temperat...
Proven Winners received OFA's Best Booth Award, selected by attendees at the trade show.
SUSTAINABILITY IS HERE A Revolutionary Technology in Sustainable Plant Nutrition&The Wa...
Features
EF Nursery, nestled in a Pacific Northwest valley, is churning out trees that survive and thrive fro...
Continual population growth has no doubt put a tax on resources. Water conservation is mandated in m...
Wayne Hibbs Farm and Garden Supply has served Sarasota, Fla., since 1953, run by three generations o...
Insights
Doughnuts are an early-morning meeting requirement. Not counting the low-carb craze that reached its...
Debate about invasive plants continues to make headlines. The ongoing discussion is prompting many p...
The recently completed National Lawn & Garden Show in Chicagoland might have been the best NLGS yet....
Interviews
In January, BFG Co., Griffin Greenhouse & Nursery Supplies and BWI Co. formed a horticulture distrib...
The old adage "waste not, want not" is an important concept at Cedar Creek All Natural Products in A...
Jim Feeney, owner of Feeney's in Feasterville, Pa., is the new president-elect of Garden Centers of ...
Industry news
New positions, honors, associations, business changes, and deaths.
Control thrips in spring, gladiolus rust detected again in Florida, beetles take a bite out of loose...
The wholesale value of domestically produced cut flowers was $416 million in 2007, according to USDA...