The listing, Lunaria annua, also known as silver $ plant seeds 20+ I always send extra has ended.
Lunaria annua, also known as the money plant because the leaves, once the outer dried layer is removed, leaving the silver layer, look like silver coins.
for more info visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunaria_annua
Money Plant Growing Info
Also known as Honesty, of the genus Lunaria, silver dollar plants are named for their fruit, whose pods dry to flat silverish discs about the size of – you guessed it! – silver dollars. They hail from Europe and were one of the first flowers grown in the dooryard gardens of the New World for their pods and edible roots. They are members of the family Brassicaceae or mustard family, which is evident in their foliage: fast-growing single stems that can reach about two feet high with broad oval leaves that are coarsely toothed.
There is nothing mustard-like about the flowers, however. They are delicate, four petaled, pink to purple blossoms grown in racemes or clusters atop the long stems and bloom in early to mid-summer. The seed pods produced by these dainty flowers are what make caring for a money plant worthwhile. By late summer, the large flat seed pods have dried to silvery discs that show off the seeds inside.
Maybe those gardeners who consider the flower to be a pest have a valid argument. Once you learn how to grow money plants, they tend to become permanent additions to the landscape and pop up anywhere except where you wanted them. Even some experts refer to them in their money plant growing info as weeds. Shame on them! They certainly are not suitable for more formal gardens, but they can be a delight elsewhere.
for more info please check out this web site; http://www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamental/flowers/money-plant/growing-money-plants.htm
Thank you very much, please allow 14 days from the day shipped, and if they have not came please let me know. lisia rules apply If you need help feel free to ask thank you
during bad weather months I try my best to water prof all seeds !