News

Oxalis regnellii triangularis is a variation that, as the name suggests, has triangular leaflets instead of rounded ones. To distinguish it even further, each leaflet is dark purple with splashes ...
I don’t know when I first saw the little pink wood sorrel … maybe in a gardening catalog or some out-of-the-way specially nursery. Today the little “Pink Shamrocks” are now a common site in local ...
In fact, it’s not even related to clover. Still, if you’d like to grow your own luck this St. Patrick’s Day, you should bring home a potted Oxalis regnellii plant.
In fact, it’s not even related to clover. Still, if you’d like to grow your own luck this St. Patrick’s Day, you should bring home a potted Oxalis regnellii plant.
Oxalis, or the false shamrock’s (Oxalis triangularis) dramatic dark purple leaves and sprays of starry white or pale pink flowers will make a striking statement in any houseplant collection. You ...
Thus, if in the spirt of St. Patrick's Day you choose to purchase a shamrock this year, be advised it probably is an oxalis, its imposter. The mislabeling probably was not intentional and, in the ...
(WHTM) – If you’re looking to extend your St. Patrick’s Day celebration beyond March 17 consider growing a shamrock plant. The “shamrock plant” that grows indoors is n… ...
Every St. Patrick’s Day, many stores sell a plant called the "false shamrock". As the name suggests, this plant (Oxalis) is not a shamrock, but an easily grown houseplant that does resemble the ...
The shamrock houseplant is a member of the genus oxalis from the wood sorrel family and is native to Africa and the Americas. Oxalis regnellii resembles a shamrock, because each leaf has three ...
In fact, it’s not even related to clover. Still, if you’d like to grow your own luck this St. Patrick’s Day, you should bring home a potted Oxalis regnellii plant.