×
Aesculus pavia sivustolta www.wildflower.org
21.3.2022 · Native from North Carolina south to Florida, west to central Texas, and as far north as Illinois, Aesculus pavia is a handsome shrub or small tree with showy thyrses (often called panicles) of deep red or yellow, campanulate flowers in early spring.
Aesculus pavia, commonly called red buckeye, is a deciduous clump-forming shrub or small tree with an irregular rounded crown. It typically grows 10-20' tall.
Showy, erect, 6-10” long panicles of red to orange-red tubular flowers in early spring. Individual flowers are 1-1.5 inches long fused tubes with 4-5 petals at ...

Hurmehevoskastanja

Kasvit
Aesculus pavia, joka tunnetaan nimellä punainen buckeye tai sähinkäinen kasvi, on lehtipuiden kukkiva kasvi. Pieni puu tai pensas on kotoisin Yhdysvaltojen etelä- ja itäosista, ja sitä löytyy Illinoisista Virginiaan pohjoisessa ja Texasista... Wikipedia (englanti)
Yläluokka: Hevoskastanjat
Tieteellinen nimi: Aesculus pavia
Aesculus pavia sivustolta en.wikipedia.org
Aesculus pavia, known as red buckeye or firecracker plant (formerly Pavia rubra), is a species of deciduous flowering plant. The small tree or shrub is ...
Aesculus pavia sivustolta edis.ifas.ufl.edu
Red buckeye is a small North American native tree, capable of reaching 25 to 30 feet tall in the wild though is most often at 15 to 20 feet high when grown in ...
Aesculus pavia sivustolta www.rhs.org.uk
Aesculus pavia. red buckeye. A large deciduous shrub to 5m, rounded in habit with glossy dark green leaves divided into five narrow leaflets.
Aesculus pavia sivustolta mtcubacenter.org
Red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) reveals its vivid red tubular flowers arranged in large terminal racemes just in time for the return of the ruby-throated ...
Aesculus pavia sivustolta www.fnps.org
Toxic fruits and foliage. Leaves drop earlier than other deciduous trees. Propagation: Seed, stem cuttings. Availability: Friends, Native nurseries, FNPS plant ...
Aesculus pavia sivustolta mortonarb.org
Aesculus pavia L. (red buckeye), close-up of inflorescence;© John Hagstrom