Learning Library
Learning Library Homepage
Plant Care Guides
Food Gardening Guides
Weed Library
Pest Control Library
Garden Curricula
Podcast
Videos
Downloads
Questions and Answers
Garden Dictionary
Edible Landscaping
Urban Gardening
Browse all articles
Plants Database
Plants Database
Search by name
Search by characteristics
Plant Combinations
See All New Database Photos
Useful Tools
View All Apps
Vegetable Planting Calendar
Frost Dates Lookup
Seed Swaps
Plant Lists
Gardening Calculators
Green Pages
Zone Lookup
Community
Gardening News
Member Ideas
Forums
Blogs
Gardening Calendar of Events
Gardening Knowledgebase
Ask a Question
Photo Contests
Signup
Login
Discovering Alpine and Sub-Alpine Plants
Marvelous!
Post a reply
» Jump to the end
By
valleylynn
May 8, 2012
I was a long time coming to the realization of the vast scope and variety of alpine plants. There are many of them that are easy to grow, if given the right conditions.
[
View the item
]
crittergarden
May 8, 2012 6:57 AM CST
Thread OP
Surprisingly GREEN Pittsburgh (Zone 6a)
Now another plant hunt begins.............
SHOW ME YOUR CRITTERS! I have a critter page over at Cubits.
http://cubits.org/crittergarde...
|
@crittergarden
|
Post #254528 (1)
valleylynn
May 8, 2012 9:25 AM CST
Name: Lynn
Oregon City, OR (Zone 8b)
But what a fun safari it will be Critter.
Sempervivum for Sale
Sempervivum
~
Sedum
~
Containers
|
@valleylynn
|
Post #254581 (2)
crittergarden
May 10, 2012 5:29 AM CST
Thread OP
Surprisingly GREEN Pittsburgh (Zone 6a)
SHOW ME YOUR CRITTERS! I have a critter page over at Cubits.
http://cubits.org/crittergarde...
|
@crittergarden
|
Post #255515 (3)
«
Garden.org Homepage
«
Back to the top
«
Forums List
«
Discovering Alpine and Sub-Alpine Plants
You must first
create a username
and
login
before you can reply to this thread.
Started by:
crittergarden
Replies: 2, views: 654
Member Login:
Username or email
Password
Login
( No account?
Join now!
)