Showing posts with label Silver Tree. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silver Tree. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 17, 2024
Winter Bliss
Need a little extra "oomph" during these cold, gloomy winter days? You got it. Plenty of winter proteas bloom during the year's shortest and darkest days, just when you need color the most! It’s easy to capture the beauty of the season with these fabulous florals and there’s such a surprising diversity of varieties and colors to choose from. So why not enjoy all that’s available?
Protea like Andrea, Brenda and Pink Ice are eagerly available and when mixed in an arrangement they’re sure to brighten your sacred space. Surprising foliage like Leucadendron Tricolor, Duet and Salignum can bring unexpected color and lovely texture to a design too. Plus, some varieties of Leucospermum like Sunrise start blooming in early winter and the striking orange hue adds a lovely contrast. Soft silvery-green argenteum or Silver Tree, spiky Grevillea flowers and fragrant eucalyptus Parvifolia with heart shaped leaves can transform a classic design into a cheerful wintry display.
There’s no doubt, the best way to turn the ‘Winter Blues’ into 'Winter Bliss' is to surround yourself with plenty of vivid colors and extraordinary textures. With proteas, it's easy to create a design that takes the chill out of the season and delivers a well-deserved pick-me-up.
Labels:
Arrangement,
California Grown,
Color,
Diversity,
Eucalyptus,
Fabulous Florals,
Grevillea Flowers,
Leucadendron,
Leucospermum,
Pincushion,
Protea,
Savoring the Season,
Silver Tree,
Texture,
Winter Bliss
Friday, September 29, 2023
The Latest Floral Inspiration
How Pincushion Protea Flowers Are Grown in California
With their striking colors, intricate forms, and eye-catching textures, pincushion protea flowers are an extraordinary addition to any floral arrangement. These captivating blooms, known for their pin-like appearance and velvety texture, have been capturing the hearts of flower enthusiasts for years.

Read more here.
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The Silver Tree
The genus is named after its most outstanding member, Leucadendron argenteum….known to botanists, gardeners and plant lovers throughout the world as the silver tree, but the early Dutch settlers dubbed it witteboom, literally ‘white tree’. In 1691 the botanist Plukenet used the name, translated into Latin, to describe the witteboom and related plants….Leucadendron, therefore, became the accepted name for this genus…
Marie Vogts, South Africa’s Proteaceae
On that projecting isthmus of land called the Cape Peninsula, at the bottom left hand corner of Africa, there can scarcely be anyone unfamiliar with the handsomest arboreal member of the protea family: silver tree or Witteboom, as it is known in high Dutch and its descendent language, Afrikaans. Always strikingly silver, it is transformed by the hot, drying, gale-force north winds of the cooler months of the year to a gleaming metallic lustre. The glory takes one’s breath away! Even the dry leaves of herbarium specimens retain their sheen, prompting Linnaeus, that first great modern plant namer, to exclaim at his desk in Uppsala, “this tree, the most shining and splendid of all plants.” I wonder if he was lucky enough to see a living specimen; the seeds were certainly available in Holland by then.
Read more here.
Labels:
Argenteum,
California Grown,
Cape Peninsula,
Fabulous Foliage,
Flowers,
Growing Information,
Leucadendron,
Leucospermum,
Pincushions,
Protea,
Silver Leaves,
Silver Tree,
Striking Coolers,
Texture,
Witteboom
Friday, August 27, 2021
Leucadendron Argenteum
Did you know Leucadendron Argenteum or more commonly called Silver Tree has given its name to an entire genus of Proteaceae? The tree also divulges the obvious allure of this unique group – the splendor of its foliage. The name Leucadendron is derived from the Greek leukas meaning ‘white’ and dendron meaning ‘tree’.
Referred to as Silver Tree because its soft, elliptical leaves (which remain on the trees for years giving it evergreen status) are covered with hairs that look amazingly like silver in the sunlight and they shimmer in the wind. These trees can reach up to forty feet in height.
You don't know whether it is a male or a female until the day it flowers and shows off with large, pure silver egg-like cones (female) or yellow pollen surrounding small silver buds (male). The Silver Tree relies on wind for dispersing its seeds instead of having to attract birds or other dispersers. Each fruit looks like a small nut and is equipped with a "parachute". Once the seed is freed by strong winds, it can travel a considerable distance thanks to its design.
Silver Tree branches are stunning when used in arrangements and its individual leaves are ideal in corsages and boutonnieres.
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
From Brush to Blooms
"To accomplish great things, we must not only act, but also dream, not only plan, but also believe." - Anatole France
The bliss of flower farming is having the opportunity to accomplish great things! Yes, farming requires a dream, planning, hard work and a big leap of faith but in the end it is possible to do the unimaginable. With those thoughts in mind, this weekend I ventured out into one of the newer flower fields to seeing how our dream was unfolding.
In 2012, we purchased several acres of land on a very steep hillside completely covered in brush. At this stage in the game you have to have a wonderful imagination with so many bushes to remove, loads of trash to cleanup, tons of bugs, snakes and animals to evict and roads to grade.
What was once only brush is now full of blooms! Here's just a glimpse of the treasures I discovered.
The bliss of flower farming is having the opportunity to accomplish great things! Yes, farming requires a dream, planning, hard work and a big leap of faith but in the end it is possible to do the unimaginable. With those thoughts in mind, this weekend I ventured out into one of the newer flower fields to seeing how our dream was unfolding.
In 2012, we purchased several acres of land on a very steep hillside completely covered in brush. At this stage in the game you have to have a wonderful imagination with so many bushes to remove, loads of trash to cleanup, tons of bugs, snakes and animals to evict and roads to grade.
What was once only brush is now full of blooms! Here's just a glimpse of the treasures I discovered.
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