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Lilacs
Daniel B. Martin wrote:
E Gregory wrote: Sounds ilke Wisteria to me, growing up trees, etc. Read this. Better yet, read it aloud. Funny! http://www.supernet.net/~jclark/fiction/wisteria.html Daniel B. Martin LOL THat was funny. Checked the photographs, and it is Lilac for sure in the front, but the rear is looking like Wisteria. :) Thank you all for the clarification. Jo |
Lilacs
Jo wrote:
Daniel B. Martin wrote: E Gregory wrote: Sounds ilke Wisteria to me, growing up trees, etc. Read this. Better yet, read it aloud. Funny! http://www.supernet.net/~jclark/fiction/wisteria.html Daniel B. Martin LOL THat was funny. Checked the photographs, and it is Lilac for sure in the front, but the rear is looking like Wisteria. :) Thank you all for the clarification. Jo Hi, Jo, recently my in-laws visited from Alabama and she told me about her lilac 'tree'. I never knew there was such a thing but I did a search and found this one at J&Ps website. Perhaps there are others that will work in our growing zone. Japanese Lilac Tree, 2 for the price of 1 A fragrant spring spectacle in the garden. Buy one, get another free! Flowering later than traditional lilacs, this showy tree produces panicles of spice-scented ivory blossoms. Include 2 trees shipped bareroot to one address. Syringa reticulata / 6" blooms–spring25' H x 10'-15' W / Zones 3-8 / Shipped bareroot,as 2'-3' standard / Full sun to part shade Save 50% off individual prices - $79.90 value |
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