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  1. May 9, 2024 · Mountain laurel ( Kalmia latifolia) is a flowering broadleaf evergreen shrub with a gnarly, multi-stemmed growth habit. It has beautiful spring blooms, and its elliptical, glossy deep-green leaves (resembling those of rhododendrons) and gnarled stems make it attractive in all seasons.

  2. Kalmia latifolia, commonly called mountain laurel, is a gnarled, multi-stemmed, broadleaf evergreen shrub or small tree that is native to Eastern North America (New England south to the southern Indiana, Louisiana and the Florida panhandle) where it is found in a variety of habitats including open rocky or sandy woods, cool meadows, balds ...

  3. Kalmia latifolia, the mountain laurel, calico-bush, or spoonwood, is a species of flowering plant in the heath family Ericaceae, that is native to the eastern United States. Its range stretches from southern Maine south to northern Florida , and west to Indiana and Louisiana .

  4. Evergreen shrub with sympodial growth and elliptic leaves. Fruit, buds, or inflorescence is visible year round. Terminal clusters of bell-shaped flowers are present in the late spring. Flowers have inner purple markings and 10 anther pockets. Old trunks and limbs are gnarly, cracked, and crooked.

  5. Kalmia latifolia (Mountain Laurel), the state flower of Connecticut and Pennsylvania, is a stunning evergreen shrub. It showcases abundant clusters of pale pink bell-shaped flowers that open from deeper pink buds, creating a captivating display in late spring and early summer.

  6. Feb 18, 2021 · Perhaps best known for growing wild en masse along the Blue Ridge Parkway in the southern Appalachians, this attractive shrub can be found growing in thickets on rocky mountain slopes and forest edges all along the eastern US from northern Florida all the way up to southern Maine.

  7. Jul 5, 2023 · Mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia) is a familiar shrub. While common, it is also extraordinary. A part of Pennsylvania's folklore as the state flower and also studied by scientists for its biomechanics, this broadleaf evergreen abounds in mystique.

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