Inula glandulosa

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Plant Characteristics
Cultivation
Scientific Names

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Read about Inula glandulosa in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture 

Inula glandulosa, Willd. Height 2 ½ -4 ft.: lower lvs. oblong-spatulate, long-attenuate at the base, the uppermost oblong with a subcordate-decurrent base, all entire or very obsoletely denticulate: glands remote; scale of involucre lance-shaped and hairy. Caucasus. B.R. 334. B.M. 1907. Gn. 22, p. 234; 25, p. 101; 49:6 and p. 7. J.H. III. 35:153; 63:139. R.H. 1881, p. 419. G.M. 33:541; 38:477. G. 5:337; 7:649, 651. var. laciniata, Hort., seems to be a trade name for the fimbriate form figured in G.M. 46:625.— Keller says it has deep golden-yellow, fringed, half- drooping rays. Rays are commonly said to be entire, but B.M. 1907 shows 2 minute teeth, and in B.R. 334 the fringes are more than ¼ in. long. This is said to be the only cult, species that does not seed freely. The Garden pictures an orange variety.


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Cultivation

Propagation

Pests and diseases

Varieties

Gallery

References

External links