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Wild geranium (Geranium maculatum) can be grown in USDA hardiness zones 3 through 11, making it suitable for many gardeners who are keen to create diverse wildlife habitats in their own yards.
We asked our friends at Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden to spotlight something fascinating at ground level. Lynn Jackson Kirk puts a neck on the line.
Wild geraniums, Geranium maculatum, are not to be confused with the ubiquitous red-flowered plants that fill the shelves of commercial nurseries in spring. Those are actually pelargoniums.
Wild geranium (Geranium maculatum) is a native, clump-forming perennial occurring in woodlands. Five-petaled, saucer-shaped flowers appear in pink to lilac hues and are 1.25 inches in diameter ...
By George Weigel/The Patriot-News Q: Help! I am being overcome with geranium weed. I pull it and pull it, and it just comes back even thicker. Some of the shoots can be 2 feet long. I have also ...
Heredity - Mating system contributes only slightly to female maintenance in gynodioecious Geranium maculatum (Geraniaceae) Skip to main content Thank you for visiting nature.com.
By a neck: The plant’s long-necked, drooping fruits explain its botanical name, Geranium maculatum – the Greek word geranos means crane. Some common names, such as cranesbill and storksbill ...
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