Buddleja davidii ‘Blue Horizon’ is a cultivar recently introduced to commerce in the UK. It was accorded the RHS Award of Garden Merit (record 677) in 2010[1] by virtue of […]
List of articles in "Eukaryote" category - Page 322
Buddleja davidii ‘Black Knight’
Buddleja davidii ‘Black Knight’ has been one of the most successful davidii cultivars ever released. A selection made by Ruys at the Moerheim Nursery Dedemsvaart Netherlands circa 1959 it was […]
Buddleja davidii ‘Bishop’s Velvet’
Buddleja davidii ‘Bishop’s Velvet’ is a cultivar raised at Sir John Quicke and Lady Prue Berthon’s garden at Newton St Cyres in Devon England. ‘Bishop’s Velvet’ featured in the Royal […]
Golden Attraction
Golden Attraction (foaled 1993 in Kentucky) is an American Thoroughbred racemare who in 1995 won five important stakes races including three Grade I events and was voted American Champion Two-Year-Old […]
Perfect Shirl
Perfect Shirl (foaled May 10 2007 in Kentucky) is an American Thoroughbred racemare who won the 2011 Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Turf. Bred and raced by Canadian businessman Charles […]
Beaugay
Beaugay (foaled 1943 in Kentucky) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse who was voted the 1945 American Champion Two-Year-Old Filly. Bred by Arthur B. Hancock at his Claiborne Farm near Paris […]
Trollius laxus
Trollius laxus is a flowering plant species in the Ranunculaceae (buttercup) family. It is native to North America and is considered to have two subspecies one with a distribution is […]
Buddleja ‘Attraction’
Buddleja ‘Attraction’ is a cultivar raised from an open pollination of Buddleja × weyeriana ‘Honeycomb’ by Prof. Michael Dirr at the University of Georgia USA in 1999.
Ranunculus pensylvanicus
Ranunculus pensylvanicus is a flowering plant species in the Ranunculaceae (buttercup) family. Common names include bristly crowfoot bristly buttercup and Pennsylvania buttercup. It is native to North America with a […]
Buddleja davidii ‘Amplissima’
Buddleja davidii ‘Amplissima’ is an old cultivar raised by the Lemoine nursery at Nancy circa 1911.