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IN THE GARDEN POPCORN JASMINE, FEATHERY CASSIA BLOOMING IN FEBRUARY.


Byline: JOSHUA SISKIN

For Valley gardeners, spring comes in February.

Already, the popcorn jasmine (Jasminum mesneyi) is in bloom. Its sheets of puffy yellow and white flowers, slightly fragrant, drape drape
v.
To cover, dress, or hang with or as if with cloth in loose folds.

n.
A cloth arranged over a patient's body during an examination or treatment or during surgery, designed to provide a sterile field around the area.
 themselves, tapestry-like, over walls or simply shoot up and spill over Verb 1. spill over - overflow with a certain feeling; "The children bubbled over with joy"; "My boss was bubbling over with anger"
bubble over, overflow

seethe, boil - be in an agitated emotional state; "The customer was seething with anger"

2.
 like floriferous flo·rif·er·ous  
adj.
Bearing flowers.



[From Latin flrifer, bearing flowers : fl
 jets from an uncanny botanical fountain.

Also, at this moment, ornamental flowering peaches are flaunting their deep rose petals. Ornamental pears are nothing but enormous billows of white flowers. And the acacias are showing or will soon be showing their miniature golden yellow flower globes.

The other day, I saw a hedge of feathery feath·er·y  
adj.
1. Covered with or consisting of feathers.

2. Resembling or suggestive of a feather, as in form or lightness.



feath
 cassia cassia (kăsh`ə): see cinnamon; senna.
cassia

Spice, also called Chinese cinnamon, consisting of the aromatic bark of the Cinnamomum cassia plant, of the laurel family.
 (Senna artemisioides), an acacia relative, in full flower. The foliage is indeed feathery, each blue gray leaf composed of many needle-thin leaflets. Its blooming performance, which features a dense array of sulfur yellow flowers, is outstanding at this time of year but may repeat itself in summer or in fall. Seeds that form in its leguminous le·gu·mi·nous  
adj.
1. Of, belonging to, or characteristic of the family Leguminosae, which includes peas, beans, clover, alfalfa, and other plants.

2. Resembling a legume.
 pods are easily germinated if they are dropped in a cup of boiled water and, after soaking there for two days, planted just beneath the surface of any well-drained soil.

If you want to continue to have feathery cassias in your yard, you would do well to start a crop of their seedlings sooner rather than later, since you may soon need to use them as replacements for your original plants. As wonderful as feathery cassias are to have around, you should not get too attached too them, as they are short-lived, typically dying within five or six years of being planted. If they live longer than that, they may become increasingly unattractive on account of continuous dieback die·back  
n.
The gradual dying of plant shoots, starting at the tips, as a result of various diseases or climatic conditions.

Noun 1.
 of their twigs and stems.

They share this characteristic with the rock roses (Cistus species), much loved for their fragrant leaves and crepe-textured flowers in rose, salmon, purple and white, but short-lived and victimized by the same stem dieback to which cassias, acacias and other leguminous shrubs and trees succumb.
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Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Feb 7, 2004
Words:322
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