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Old 04-01-2008, 03:47 AM posted to rec.gardens
GigglesMom GigglesMom is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jan 2008
Posts: 4
Default Can anyone identify this blue flower?

On Jan 3, 8:13*am, GHillside wrote:
On Dec 31 2007, wrote:





When I bought my house, there was this blue flower growing in partial
shade, dry soil... it's behaved like a perennial, but in this part of
Texas, a lot of plants that are annuals survive the winter. * The
flowers have four petals, pale blue, and it grows as sort of a ground
hugging vine (but very slow-growing, maybe because of the shade/dry
soil, or that it grows beneath an oleandar?)


Unfortunately, my well-meaning brother didn't notice it there because
it wasn't in flower and raked it up while getting ready for Halloween
trick-or-treaters! * I don't know if he got the root or not, but if I
can identify it, I'd like to plant some more... it's a charming little
plant and looks great growing over the landscaping rocks...


I've done countless web-searches, browsed most of the Lady Bird
Johnson flower database... and come up short...

Thanks GHillside,

But I'm reasonably sure it's not a phlox, even though the flowers are
*very* similar... the leaves on my flower were whirled, and phlox has
opposite leaves. The leaves really do look very close to a Plumbago,
and I'm beginning to think that maybe I just have (sigh, I mean *had*)
a mutant plumbago.

If it grows back, I'm going to take a cutting to a county extension
agent I think...

GM


I would be eternally greatful if someone could give me a clue:


http://gotmama.com/flower.html


Kind regards,
GigglesMom


It looks like a phlox to me. although not a Phlox divaricata, maybe
Phlox stolonifera -- Creeping Phlox. *but these also appear to be 5-
petaled. *Although not sure it can grow in Texas. * A perennial.- Hide quoted text -

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