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Cordyline australis in pot
Cordyline australe
Cordyline australis
Cordyline Red Star in pot
Cordyline 'Red Star
Cordyline australis 'Red Star'
Cordtkube australis variegated green foliage
Cordyline 'Torbay Dazzler'
Cordyline australis 'Torbay Dazzler'
Patterned green foliage plant Ctenanthe burle-marxii
Ctenanthe burle-marxii
Ctenanthe burle-marxii
Green and yellow leaves Ctenanthe lubbersiana
Ctenanthe lubbersiana
Ctenanthe lubbersiana
Ctenanthe oppenheimiana in pot
Ctenanthe oppenheimiana
Ctenanthe oppenheimiana
Green leaf pattern Ctenanthe setosa
Ctenanthe setosa
Ctenanthe setosa
False papyrus in a pot
False papyrus
Cyperus alternifolius
Papyrus in a pot
Papyrus
Cyperus papyrus
Potted rabbit's foot fern
Davallia canariensis
Davallia canariensis
Davallia fejeensis fern frond
Davallia fejeensis
Davallia fejeensis
Davallia trichomanoides fronds
Squirrel's foot fern
Davallia trichomanoides
Potted rabbit's foot fern
Davallia tyermannii
Davallia tyermannii
Tree fern Dicksonia antarctica nature
Dicksonia antarctica
Dicksonia antarctica
Dieffenbachia Green Magic in pot
Dieffenbachia 'Green Magic
Dieffenbachia oerstedii
Dieffenbachia seguine in pot
Mute cane
Dieffenbachia seguine
Dieffenbachia Camilla in pot
Dieffenbachia 'Camilla
Dieffenbachia seguine 'Camilla'
Dionée flycatcher in pot
Dionée attrape-mouche
Dionaea muscipula
Green cultivar Dionée attrape-mouche
Dionée attrape-mouche 'All Green
Dionaea muscipula 'All Green'
Dionaea muscipula 'Red Dragon' in pot
Dionée attrape-mouche 'Red Dragon
Dionaea muscipula 'Red Dragon'
Sansevieria ballyi in flower
Dracaena ballyi
Dracaena ballyi
Spiral leaves of Dracaena fragrans
Fragrant Dragonwood
Dracaena fragrans
Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon Lime
Fragrant Dragonwood 'Lemon lime
Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon lime'
Young shoot Dracaena reflexa
Dragonwood reflexa
Dracaena reflexa

Herbaceous

Herbaceous plants are not strictly speaking a botanical category. According to the Académie française, herbaceous plants include "everything of the nature of grass". Yet coleus, date palms and violets have much in common.

Characteristics of herbaceous plants

When the Immortals refer to the nature of grass, they mean three characteristics:

- color: herbaceous plants tend to be green (any shade is acceptable);
- smell: herbaceous plants exhale a scent similar to that of grass;
- texture: the aerial stems of herbaceous plants are supple, even soft.

The reason herbaceous stems are flexible is that they contain very little lignin, unlike the trunks of trees, shrubs and bristly plants. This is why banana trees, pineapples, palms and bamboos are giant grasses, not trees. Their false trunk is a stem, which contains almost no wood.

Choosing herbaceous plants according to their life cycle

Annual herbaceous plants complete their life cycle in one year and then die. Before that, they spread their seeds to give rise to new specimens. The ephemeral flowers of poppies, marigolds, morning glory (Convolvulus tricolor) and sunflowers brighten up your garden for a summer. In the vegetable garden, you'll need to replant tomatoes, radishes, peas and green beans every year. Finally, aromatic plants such as parsley, basil and savory are considered annuals.

Biennial plants have a two-year life cycle. They grow in the first year and flower in the second. If you're not in a hurry to see your garden take on color, you can plant biennial herbaceous plants such as foxglove, snapdragon, pansy, hollyhock or primrose. You'll also need to wait two years before harvesting beet, wild carrots, cabbage, spinach, broccoli and fennel.

Varieties that live longer than two years are called perennials. If you don't feel like sowing every year, opt for sedum, St John's wort, periwinkle, angel's hair, thyme, chives, sempervivum and ferns. Cardoon, spinach sorrel and wild garlic provide a harvest every year.

Our green plants, such as alocasias, monsteras, calatheas and pothos, are tropical perennials. They are not very hardy and, in the open ground, they cannot withstand the rigors of winter. They behave like annuals. Grown indoors, they live for several years. Rejections, layering and cuttings extend the plant's life.

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