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White Flowers
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- Intoxicating fragrance
- Thrives only briefly, about 1 year
- Very fast growth rate
- Extremely versatile
- Distinctive-looking fruit with spiked exterior
- Beautiful rounded canopy
- Majestic and graceful
- Lovely dark green, shiny leaves
- Beautiful rounded dense canopy
- Flowers profusely year round
Faux Persil, Heartseed
- Striking silhouette
- Cold tolerant
- Attracts butterflies
- Highly nutritious fruit
Spicewood
- Attractive silver-gray foliage
- Can be trimmed into manicured shapes
- Narrow canopy
- Recently classified invasive
- Massive, breathtaking and impressive
- Highly nutritious fruit
- Abundance of orange-red flowers in summer
- Unique, sweet, almond-like flavor
- Pineapple-like showy fruits (female plants)
- Attractive glossy leaves
- Raised diamond-shaped trunk pattern
- Silvery blue-green fronds
- Elegant appearance
- Beloved in South Florida
- Can be kept narrow
- Completely bare in winter
- Recently classified invasive
- Compact size
- Rapid growth
- Dark green leaves
- Colorful new leafs
- Requires shade when young
- Majestic, sprawling canopy
- Heavy feeder
- Attractive contrast between flowers and foliage
- Beloved in South Florida
- Stunning during brief late spring bloom
- Tropical silhouette
- Striking and exotic
- Stunning
- Very rare
Pineland Brake Fern
- Relatively compact and narrow canopy
- Wonderfully fragrant at night
- Native
- Can be trimmed into manicured shapes
- Beautiful sweeping fronds with drooping leaflets
- Narrow canopy
- Narrow crown
- Relatively uncommon in South Florida
- Pyramidal crown
- Narrow enough for tight spaces
- Retains leaves until just before blooming
- Elegant
- Unusual deep green leaves with bronze underside
- Can be kept narrow
- Colorful fall foliage
- Uniquely shaped with a muscular look
Gullfeed, Inkberry
- Colorful older leaves
- Massive stature when mature
- Unique, fern-like leaves
- Striking symmetrical appearance
- Tiered branches
- Prominent blue-gray crownshaft
- Stately and uncommon
- Unique, sweet almond flavor
- Heavy feeder
Trailing Eugenia
- Dense attractive foliage
- Fragrant clusters of flowers in fall
- Iconic symbol of the south
- Unique and prized
- Recently classified invasive
- Prefers acidic soil
- Salt tolerant
- Very slow growth
- Does best in warmer areas of South Florida
- Sprawling and informal shrub
- Unique, stout pineapple-like trunk when young
- Prominant olive crownshaft
- Self-shedding fronds
- Showy reddish peeling bark
- Very showy clusters of red flowers
- Grows tall, but not massive

