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Plant ID

Guernsey Donkey2Guernsey Donkey2 Posts: 6,713
Can you help me to name these plants please? Pictures 1 & 2 are the same plant.

Posts

  • RubytooRubytoo Posts: 1,630
    3 osteospemum?
    4 delospermum /ma. Does it have succulent type of stems?
  • BorderlineBorderline Posts: 4,700
    I think the top two photos are the Chilean Myrtle shrub, Luma Apiculata.

    Last photo could be Delosperma Cooperi.
  • NollieNollie Posts: 7,529
    pic 1/2 looks a lovely shrub, GD, evergreen?
    Mountainous Northern Catalunya, Spain. Hot summers, cold winters.
  • Silver surferSilver surfer Posts: 4,719
    edited May 2019
    1 and 2 Looks like Mytus family.....one such as Myrtus apiculata.

    https://www.google.com/search?q=myrtus+apiculata&client=firefox-b-d&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwic6enh_ZfiAhVRRhUIHdaKDykQ_AUIDigB&biw=1920&bih=944

    Sorry Borderline...didn't see your post.
    Must have been below blinking advert.
    Perthshire. SCOTLAND .
  • Guernsey Donkey2Guernsey Donkey2 Posts: 6,713
    Yes, that's the one (1+2), with a brown bark, thank you. I am not sure if 3 is an osteospemum and the 4th is a type of succulent which can grow in the driest of conditions, but it's name escapes me.
  • wild edgeswild edges Posts: 10,497
    Is number 4 a hottentot fig?
    If you can keep your head, while those around you are losing theirs, you may not have grasped the seriousness of the situation.
  • Guernsey Donkey2Guernsey Donkey2 Posts: 6,713
    No it's not that wild edges, hottentot is much thicker and more succulent than this, which I think could be a mesembreanthium perhaps.
  • JennyJJennyJ Posts: 10,576
    I think 3 is a senetti.  They probably wouldn't survive a winter outside here but down south in the Channel Islands where it's much milder, it could.
    Doncaster, South Yorkshire. Soil type: sandy, well-drained
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