Cordyline

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  • Sensational Plant - Cordyline Red Fountain

    Garden Gurus — Neville discovers the beauty of the Cordyline Red Fountain, a plant with brilliant foliage that has the ability to flourish in both sun and shade. The plant was discovered in New Zealand over 20 years ago, as a sport or chance variation. It ...More…

  • CORDYLINE DISEASES

    Old House Web — Leaf spot causes irregular, small, brown spots with yellowish margins. No chemical control is listed. Fusarium leaf spot causes circular, slightly raised, reddish brown lesions, surrounded by a yellow halo. No chemical control is listed. Tip ...More…

  • Cordyline terminalis - Red Edge, Hawaiian Ti, Ti Plant

    Old House Web — Some cordylines have brightly colored foliage, others are only green. The maximum amount of light is needed for best foliage colors. Do not allow the soil to dry out and maintain temperatures between 60 and 85 degrees. Ti plant can grow well in ...More…

  • Cordyline Red Fountain

    Garden Gurus — The standout feature of the Cordyline'Red Fountain' is its weeping or fountain-like habit, which is much softer on the eye than more formal upright forms. It does display pale lilac flowers in spring and summer but it's the foliage colour ...More…

  • New plant introduction - Cordyline Cabernett TM

    Garden Gurus — Autumn is one of the best times of the year to get out into your nearest garden centre and discover new release plants. Trevor shows us a new clumping cordyline called Cordyline Cabernett . It grows to around 2 metres and has shiny sword shaped ...More…

  • Red Fountain Cordyline

    Garden Gurus — One of the most common questions the Guru's are asked about is gardenias failing in gardens. It is not surprising when there is a salt water swimming pool or a limestone wall close by. Gardenias hate alkaline soil and they are not going to ...More…

  • Bushy Cordyline for Tropical Gardens

    National Gardening Association — Tropical plants continue to be the rage, especially in container gardens. One of the most popular tropicals is best loved for its leaves, not flowers. Cordyline is an Australian native that features strap-like leaves. Its spiky growth adds height ...More…

  • Cordyline indivisa

    Missouri Botanical Garden — Winter hardy to USDA Zones 9-11. Best grown in moist, fertile, organically rich, well-drained soils in part shade. In St. Louis, it must be grown in containers that can be placed outside on patios in summer or grown indoors year-round as ...More…

  • Cordyline fruiticosa

    Missouri Botanical Garden — Grow in St. Louis as a houseplant. Best in a well-drained, peaty potting mixture. Plants need bright indirect light, but tolerate light shade. Avoid direct sun. Needs consistently moist soils from spring to fall. Does not require winter dormancy, ...More…

  • Cordyline fruticosa

    Janine's Garden — Native to Southeast Asia, northern Australia and islands of the Pacific. Thought to have originated somewhere in the vicinity of New Guinea and spread through the Pacific by Melanesians and Polynesians, who valued its starchy rhizomes as food. It ...More…

  • Cordyline

    Janine's Garden — Native to the southwest Pacific region (one species in tropical America), most of the 15 or so species of this genus of somewhat palm-like evergreen shrubs and small trees are tropical or subtropical. A few of the New Zealand species are ...More…

  • Cordyline australis

    Janine's Garden — This striking New Zealand native is moderately frost hardy, occurring in some of that country’s southernmost areas. The seedlings, with very narrow, arching leaves, are sold as indoor plants and last for years in this juvenile state. Planted ...More…


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