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Maria von Brincken APLD
Certified Landscape Designer

978-443-4540
maria@mariavonbrincken.com

Landscape Design • Planning •
Construction Coordination
Beautiful gardens that add to your life

Providing eco-friendly
landscapes since 1990







Copyright 2009 Maria von Brincken. To use photos or text please contact maria@mariavonbrincken.com

Looking Inside

texture is amazing

Amazing texture, shape, and colors....

If you tire of the beautiful winter wonderland, look closely at your friend’s or your own indoor plants.

P.S. Wondering what this plant is?  Echeveria gibbiflora.  My friend Marylyn–a horticultural diva– grew this succulent. It’s in the same family as the jade plant. ”Echeveria gibbiflora ‘Carunculata’ is quite distinctive. This cultivar has very blue colored leaves with very exotic-looking growths that arise from the upper foliage during some periods of the year. Rather than having the usual rosette, ground-hugging form, this looks more like an overgrown flowering cabbage or kale that we typically see during the fall months in garden centers”. While I’m interested in the foliage, you might like to know that this “hens and chicks” (not the Sempervirum associated with this “common” name)  blooms in the winter months. In zones 8-10–its native area it prospers in a woodland area.  Succulent in a woodland–interesting mental picture–isn’t it? My friend Marylyn grows it in a sunny southern facing window filled with other plants (some tall and some short)–maybe that mimics a woodland. For more information, check out the site I googled and quoted from “Cacti and Succulents Site–the article by Bella’s online Cacti and Succulents Editor, Connie Krochmal.
  

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