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Echeveria pulidonis. A slow growing Echeveria from the State of Puebla, Mexico. Has been in cultivation since the 1960s. Will eventually offset. Easily propagated from cuttings. The plant photographed is a recent purchase by my wife.
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Echeveria pulidonis. Nascent offset pictured. A slow growing Echeveria from the State of Puebla, Mexico. Has been in cultivation since the 1960s. Will eventually offset. Easily propagated from cuttings. The plant photographed is a recent purchase by my wife.
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Echeveria pulidonis. A slow growing Echeveria from the State of Puebla, Mexico. Has been in cultivation since the 1960s. Will eventually offset. Easily propagated from cuttings. The plant photographed is a recent purchase by my wife.
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Echeveria pulidonis. A slow growing Echeveria from the State of Puebla, Mexico. Has been in cultivation since the 1960s. Will eventually offset. Easily propagated from cuttings. The plant photographed grows in a private garden in Berkeley, CA.
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Echeveria pulidonis. A slow growing Echeveria from the State of Puebla, Mexico. Has been in cultivation since the 1960s. Will eventually offset. Easily propagated from cuttings. The plant photographed grows in a private garden in Berkeley, CA.
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Native to southern California and northern Baja California. San Diego Botanical Gardens.
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Orinda, California, United States
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Known as Zarzaparilla Cordillerana in its range of central to southern Chile and adjacent Argentina.
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Orinda, California, United States
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Baltimore, Maryland, United States
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Baltimore, Maryland, United States
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Orinda, California, United States
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Orinda, California, United States
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Ribes aureumgolden currant. A Meriwether Lewis collection, but well known to Native Americans who used the berries in pemmican, among other uses. Easy to grow in gardens where the yellow flowers delight in spring and the red, yellow, or black berries are a treat to eye and palate. Photographed in a private garden in Lafayette, CA.
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Orinda, California, United States
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Liquidambar styracifluaSweetgum. Native to the southeastern United States, the Ohio River valley and the western Lower Mississippi River Valley into Oklahoma and Texas. Disjunct populations are found from southern Mexico south to Nicaragua. Uses include as a sweet resin harvested for folk medicines and as an additive to cosmetic products. The wood is used as a veneer and whole for furniture. Widely planted in the San Francisco Bay Area as a street tree. The leaf photographed grew in Berkeley, CA
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Florida, United States