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I would not want to leave out verbenas, one of them anyway.
It has lost most of its religious content to become a popular festival with live music, food, drinks and verbenas.
Peaches and Cream adds a new color dimension to verbenas.
Don't be upset if its leaves fall off soon after; lemon verbenas typically go dormant in winter.
It is quite typical in fairs and verbenas.
Verbenas are a case in point.
The official close to each day's events is midnight, but in practice impromptu verbenas carry on in the streets all night.
Verbenas: celebrations on the suburbs' streets with dances, music, games and gastronomy from different regions of the country.
Their common names are shrub verbenas or lantanas.
She cuts back verbenas that are looking tired by now, and with a dose of fertilizer, they put out a new flush of growth.
Some verbenas are considered weeds.
There are also lots of containers planted with half-hardies such as pelargoniums, verbenas and fuchsias.
There were many other plants of interest, from salvias to colorful verbenas not subject, like the old hybrids, to whiteflies and mildew.
For variety, I mix different shades together; blue and pink verbenas or orange and yellow nasturtiums, for example.
Some of the petunias, fuchsias, coleus, verbenas and other annuals could be salvaged after cosmetic surgery.
Most Fiestas patronales feature verbenas, live entertainment by famous international or local singers, amusement parks, and street vendors, among other things, during the celebration.
Nowadays, some major cities, such as Barcelona, host "permanent" verbenas, but these have less tradition character than those that appear for only a few days each year.
He alternately performed onstage in "verbenas" (dancing music in local festivities) with the band Minxoriak up to the late 80s.
Includes heliotrope, tuberoses and verbenas.
"Collection of beautiful green-house plants - among them many fine varieties of roses, callas, verbenas, heliotropes, azalias"
Other "verbenas"/"vervains" of the family Verbenaceae:
Unrelated flowering plants called "verbenas"/"vervains":
I refer here not to the annual verbenas available as bedding plants every spring at garden centers but to the native North American perennial, V. canadensis.
Seed starting also should be well underway for those long-season annuals like begonias, petunias, snapdragons, verbenas, lobelias and coleus.
She fertilizes her lantanas and verbenas, like Homestead Purple and Sissinghurst, a vibrant pink.
From behind the Vervains' door, I also heard sounds indicative of an argument.
It belongs to the "true" vervains of genus Verbena.
This species is a member of the diploid North American vervains which have 14 chromosomes altogether.
Verbena bonariensis is a member of the South American vervains, which are polyploid and have more than 14 chromosomes.
Verbena (Vervains)
Other "verbenas"/"vervains" of the family Verbenaceae:
Verveine, the famous green liqueur from the region of Le Puy-en-Velay (France) is flavored with these vervains.
From hither to yon went Howard, charging his Red troops against the Blues, with roses dy- ing in great gallantry and bluebells triumphant over the vervains.
Closely related to the true vervains and sometimes still included with them in Verbena, horizontal chloroplast transfer occurred at least twice and possibly three times between these genera, which are otherwise rather too distinct to warrant unification.
Although hybridization runs rampant in the true and mock vervains - the ancestors of the well-known Garden Vervain are quite obscure -, it does not seem to have been the cause of the cross-species gene transfer.
It seems that verbena as well as the related mock vervains (Glandularia) evolved from the assemblage provisionally treated under the genus name Junellia; both other genera were usually included in the Verbenaceae until the 1990s.
Intergeneric chloroplast gene transfer by an undetermined mechanism - though probably not hybridization - has occurred at least twice from vervains to Glandularia, between the ancestors of the present-day South American lineages and once more recently, between V. orcuttiana or V. hastata and G. bipinnatifida.
Verbena is a genus of plants in the family Verbenaceae.
Premna grandifolia is a small shrub in the Verbenaceae family.
The new narrowly circumscribed Verbenaceae family includes some 35 genera and 1,200 species.
Despite the fact that the revision is well supported with volumes of data, many authors continue to incorrectly place the plant in Verbenaceae.
Callicarpa maingayi is a species of beautyberry plant in the Verbenaceae family.
The larvae feed on a wide range of plants, including species from the Ulmaceae and Verbenaceae families.
"Fiddlewoods" is also the collective term for the Verbenaceae genus Citharexylum.
Aloysia citrodora is a species of flowering plant in the verbena family Verbenaceae, native to western south america.
The larvae feed on Lantana camara and probably other Verbenaceae species.
This genus was previously placed by Cronquist in the verbena family Verbenaceae.
The widespread genus contains eight species that grow on dicots, especially the tropical flowering plant family Verbenaceae.
Despite the common names, they are not related to Verbena (vervains) or lantanas in the family Verbenaceae.
Teak belongs to the family Lamiaceae (in older classifications in Verbenaceae).
Of the family Verbenaceae:
The larvae mostly feed on Oleaceae, Scrophulariaceae and Verbenaceae species, although there are records from other families.
White beech was previously classified in the Verbenaceae, but its genus and many others have been transferred into the mint family Lamiaceae.
Vitex parviflora is a species of plant in the Verbenaceae family, known mostly as Molave Tree.
Economically important Verbenaceae include:
This herb belongs to Verbenaceae/Lamiaceae family.
As a result of this reorganization, two monophyletic families were established from the paraphyletic Verbenaceae and polyphyletic Lamiaceae.
Lippia substrigosa is a plant from the Verbenaceae family that is native to Central and South America.
Its wingspan is around 17 mm and its larvae feeds on Verbenaceae species, including Stachytarpheta urticifolia.
Recent phylogenetic studies have shown that numerous genera traditionally classified in Verbenaceae belong instead in Lamiaceae.
The currently accepted version of Verbenaceae may not be more closely related to Lamiaceae than some of the other families in the order Lamiales.
Other "verbenas"/"vervains" of the family Verbenaceae: