A perennial, to around 60cm high, with upright stems and deeply lobed, light green leaves covered with fine silvery hairs. In summer, produces clusters of nodding white or pale lilac pink flowers, ...
The plants we know as geraniums aren’t actually geraniums. If you point to a geranium at a garden shop, you're actually probably identifying a Pelargonium, a member of a group of plants that have ...
The best hardy geranium varieties (aka cranesbills) provide months of color and effective ground cover. In the last 50 or 60 years, these dependable jewel-hued bloomers have become some of our most ...
Rebranded as “Geran-2,” or Geranium-2. An Iranian-made suicide drone imported by Russia for use in its invasion of Ukraine. Rebranded as “Geran-2,” or Geranium-2. An Iranian-made suicide ...
Geranium 'Johnson's Blue' is a fantastic cranesbill geranium, bearing masses of large, dark-veined, lavender-blue flowers that fade to pearl grey as they mature. It's an informal-looking, slightly ...
Like his artistic hero, Paul Cezanne, Henri Matisse merged the traditional and the avant-garde. In Still Life with Geranium, he transformed a simple still life into a populated Arcadian landscape ...
This trial will be an evaluation of rose geranium in sesame oil nasal spray versus nasal saline. Rose geranium in sesame oil nasal spray is a compounded preparation, containing 0.2 mL (4 drops) of ...
A spreading, floriferous hardy geranium with deeply divided yellowish-green leaves and abundant clear violet-blue flowers with paler centres, and fine reddish veins, borne on periphery of foliage; ...
Hardy geraniums (also known as cranesbills) are a fabulous choice for beds and borders and the best varieties provide pretty and colorful blooms for months, but if geranium leaves are yellow, it’s a ...
The caterpillar has white stripes running lengthwise along the abdomen. It has numerous erect hairs on its body. These caterpillars are commonly brown but can also be red, purple or green depending on ...
If you suspect your pet may have ingested a potentially toxic substance, call the APCC at (888) 426-4435 or contact your local veterinarian as soon as possible.* * A consultation fee may apply.