Tripple Brook Farm

bottom

Genus: E

Echinacea
purple coneflower
Elaeagnus
wolfberry; silverberry
Empetrum
black crowberry
Epigaea
Mayflower; trailing arbutus
Epimedium
bishop's cap
Equisetum
scouring rush
Eragrostis
love grass
Erianthus
Ravenna grass
Erigeron
Fleabane
Eriophorum
rough cotton grass
Euonymous
running strawberry bush
Eupatorium
Joe-Pye-weed; boneset; hardy ageratum; mist flower
Euphorbia
flowering spurge

Next: F
Previous: D

Catalog as of April 01, 2008

Euphorbia

(Euphorbiiacea - spurge family)
Over 1,600 species of herbs, shrubs or trees, widely distributed and extremely variable in growth habit. Many species (mostly tender) are cactus-like, succulent, and often spiny, but Euphorbias take a wide range of other forms as well. The tender species are often grown indoors, or cultivated outdoors in warm climates. Many of the hardy species (most or all of which are herbaceous) are cultivated as ornamentals; they thrive in any good garden soil. The milky juice of many euphorbias can cause severe dermatitis in susceptible individuals, and care should be taken in working with the plants.

corollata peren • ht 18-36" • zones 4-7

flowering spurge


native, wildlife, dry - moist, sun - part shade
e N Amer

The slender, upright stems of this native wildflower of open woods, meadows, and roadsides bear numerous narrowly oval leaves. Clusters of small white flowers appear atop the stems from summer through early fall. The seeds are a popular food of gamebirds and songbirds. Plant has been used medicinally.

cat # 5R3T
$8.95 each