Snapdragon family
Scrophulariaceae
An-tir-ry'num. About 40 species of hardy, herbaceous perennials or annuals, natives of the northern hemisphere.
Description
Erect or spreading, sometimes covered with short, sticky hairs. Leaves alternate, lance-shaped or ovalish, with heart-shaped base, sometimes bluntly lobed. Flowers solitary or in long terminal racemes, the individual flower growing from the axil of a small, leafy bract, white, yellow, pink, red, or purple. Calyx of 5 sepals. Corolla tubular, pouched, forming a mouth, the upper lip 2-lobed, the lower lip 3-lobed, the lips turning outward. 5 stamens: 4 fertile, 1 sterile, growing inside the corolla tube.
How to Grow
Start seeds indoors. Move seedlings outside when planting bed can be worked. Plant 6-12 in. (15-30 cm) apart in full sun. In long-season areas a fine crop of late fall snaps can be grown from seeds sown in a shaded nursery bed in Aug. or Sept. Prefers cool weather.
Antirrhinum majus
Common Snapdragon
;
Toad's-Mouth
. To 3 ft. (90 cm) high. Flowers reddish-purple, red, white, yellow, orange, or pink, to 1 in. (4 cm) long, in long terminal racemes. Mediterranean region. Choose a rust-resistant variety. Will survive a slight frost. 'Little Darling', semidwarf form, has pink flowers. Perennial grown as a half-hardy annual.




