Ambassador Board Plant Sale
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For your outdoor garden, enjoy this creative herb garden filled with all the herbs you might need for creating delicious delights in the kitchen. It has a unique three tier design with an adorable vintage watering can to top it all off.
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This outdoor succulent creation in a barrel is sure to add to your patio, door step, or general yard appeal! Note: while this arrangement is for the outdoors, please bring inside if frost is expected or temperatures reach 36 degrees or lower.
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This bucket full of sunshine includes bright petunias, fragrant smelling stock, and sweet william. If you look closely you'll also find some little gems (gnome relaxing in his wheel barrow and rocks painted by program youth).
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Even if you're not an Oregon State fan, you'll love this brightly colored orange Geranium to brighten your patio or door step! The "Hope" rock (Hope is one of the Friends of the Children Core Assets) was painted by one of our program youth :)
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This Hens and Chicks and sedum delightful arrangement grows well outdoors (as well as indoors) and was grown locally by our Klamath Basin Master Garden group. Hens and chicks are members of the Sempervivum group of succulent plants. They are called hens and chicks because of the rosette shape and habit of the plant to produce numerous babies.
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Brighten any outdoor spot with these brightly colored petunias and zinnia in an old vintage pot.
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These double geraniums were locally grown by our Klamath Basin Master Gardners and what better way to plant them in than this cute tin watering can!
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These scented geraniums, along with some sweet william, all grown by our local Master Gardeners, will simply take your breath away.
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This Hens and Chicks succulent grows well outdoors (as well as indoors) and was grown locally by our Klamath Basin Master Garden group. Hens and chicks are members of the Sempervivum group of succulent plants. They are called hens and chicks because of the rosette shape and habit of the plant to produce numerous babies. Requires very little water (on average once a week is often enough but please avoid watering when the soil is damp and especially after a rain.
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Who doesn't love petunias in a tin pail? Move around your patio to brighten any spot!
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