MBG Home Horticulture MBG Search

Quick Links
Home Page
Highlights
PlantFinder
PF Search
Pests
Plants of Merit
Master Search
 
Searches
GardeningHelp
Titles
PlantFinder
Pest Images
Bloom Data
Scientific name

 

Plants in Bloom for September 23 - September 29

Click for audio file.
Go to index

In the bulb gardens you can still see dahlias, caladiums and gladiolus.


Also, don't miss the spectacular alocasias, colocasias and xanthosomas.


Liriope and autumn clematis is still flowering in several locations.


Cooler temperatures have brought nice fall flowering on several spiderworts, obedient plants, and gauras.


Be sure and look for the wonderful toad lilies. Also don't miss the spectacular hyacinth bean in the Kemper experimental garden.

 

Crape myrtles continue in flower and add bright colors to early fall.


Roses have come back for a fall display and the summer annuals are still showy but are being replaced with mums and other fall-bloomers.


Rosa 'Wezaprt' BRONZE STAR  (lf)
Gladney Rose Garden

Hybrid tea rose Rosa 'Eureka'  (lf)
Lehmann Building Landscape

Summer bedding plants  (lf)
Victorian Garden

Both blue and red cardinal flowers are in flower as well as the bush clovers.


The ornamental grasses are lovely. Bluebeards are in full-flower.


Some butterfly bushes continue in bloom and miscanthus are displaying their showy panicles.

 

Rose of Sharons continue and the castor aralia is just finishing flowering near the eastern entrance to the Japanese Garden.


Turtlehead continues and the goldenrods are flowering. Plumbago is still showy in several locations.


The seven-son flower is still in full-flower and the solitary clematis is lovely. Some early beautyberries have showy fruit.


Some garden phlox are still in flower but they are being outdone by the fall asters, such as 'Purple Dome' .

 

In the Kemper Center Bird Garden enjoy scarlet rose mallow. You will also see a great crop of red berries on the winterberry, which will provide many months of winter color.

 

Tropical waterlilies are blooming and you may also catch a flower on the impressive Amazon water lily.


Tropical water lily Nymphaea 'Missouri'  (lf)
Climatron Axis
 

In shady areas you may see the hardy begonia. In sunny areas look for the showy stonecrops.

 

The Japanese anemones are in flower and the blue salvia is still gorgeous. Monk's-hood is flowering in the Ottoman Garden. It has very striking and unusual flowers.


Monk's-hood Aconitum carmichaelii 'Arendsii'  (lf)
Strassenfest Garden

Some summer annuals you will still see are begonias, ageratum and pentas.


Some plants you can still see in our summer baskets and containers include Chinese hibiscus, mandevilla, and scaevola.

© Missouri Botanical Garden, 2001-2009