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George W. Frost 17-12-2007 01:09 AM

What is this?
 
1 Attachment(s)
Anyone have a clue as to what this is called,
I took it to a nursery and they claimed it was an Ardisia, but not so,
Anyone knowledgeable enough to tell me

Thanks





Zoot 17-12-2007 02:04 AM

What is this?
 
It looks like a type of mimosa pudica, aka sleeping grass, aka sensitive
plant. The kind I've seen has sharp thorns, and is sensitive to touch. When
I was on Guam many years ago, it grew everywhere, making it hazardous to go
barefoot.

"George W. Frost" wrote in message
...
Anyone have a clue as to what this is called,
I took it to a nursery and they claimed it was an Ardisia, but not so,
Anyone knowledgeable enough to tell me

Thanks





George W. Frost 17-12-2007 03:24 AM

What is this?
 

"Zoot" wrote in message
...
It looks like a type of mimosa pudica, aka sleeping grass, aka sensitive
plant. The kind I've seen has sharp thorns, and is sensitive to touch.
When I was on Guam many years ago, it grew everywhere, making it hazardous
to go barefoot.



Thanks for the reply, I think it is some sort of mimosa, but it doesnt have
thorns nor are the leaves sensitive to touch

I will keep looking

Thanks
frosty



Omelet 17-12-2007 05:33 AM

What is this?
 
In article ,
"George W. Frost" wrote:

Anyone have a clue as to what this is called,
I took it to a nursery and they claimed it was an Ardisia, but not so,
Anyone knowledgeable enough to tell me

Thanks


begin 666 DSCF3888.JPG
[Image]

end


Looks like some type of acacia/mimosa???
--
Peace, Om

Remove - (dash) to validate gmail.

"Human nature seems to be to control other people until they put their foot down." -- Steve Rothstein

Charles[_1_] 17-12-2007 06:30 AM

What is this?
 
On Mon, 17 Dec 2007 01:09:58 GMT, "George W. Frost"
wrote:

Anyone have a clue as to what this is called,
I took it to a nursery and they claimed it was an Ardisia, but not so,
Anyone knowledgeable enough to tell me

Thanks



Compare to this picture

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgu...%3Den%26sa%3DN

or

http://tinyurl.com/3dehka

Bob Hobden 17-12-2007 09:31 AM

What is this?
 

"George W. Frost" wrote
Anyone have a clue as to what this is called,
I took it to a nursery and they claimed it was an Ardisia, but not so,
Anyone knowledgeable enough to tell me


The N. Americans call it Mimosa others (most of the rest of the world) call
it the Silk Tree and use the name Mimosa for Acacia dealbata. A good example
of why Latin names are so important.

Correctly it's Albizia julibrissin
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albizia_julibrissin

There are red flowered varieties and dark red leaved varieties too although
I've not seen a flowering sized one of the latter.

--
Regards
Bob Hobden
17mls W. of London.UK

Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail



George W. Frost 17-12-2007 12:27 PM

What is this?
 

"Charles" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 17 Dec 2007 01:09:58 GMT, "George W. Frost"
wrote:

Anyone have a clue as to what this is called,
I took it to a nursery and they claimed it was an Ardisia, but not so,
Anyone knowledgeable enough to tell me

Thanks



Compare to this picture

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgu...%3Den%26sa%3DN

or

http://tinyurl.com/3dehka


Yes, that's it, well, almost it, but mine doesnt have the bee in it,
Thanks all for your replies and the tree is a Persian Silk Tree as I have
since found out, a mimosa plant



beccabunga 31-12-2008 01:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by George W. Frost (Post 765108)
Anyone have a clue as to what this is called,
I took it to a nursery and they claimed it was an Ardisia, but not so,
Anyone knowledgeable enough to tell me

Thanks

Generally known in the UK as Albizia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albizia


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