IN WORD FORMAT
Feijoa sellowiana = common names = “pineapple guava” or Acca sellowiana or California feijoa tree. This is the only species in this genus. Its flowers are very unusual looking (at least to me). It is native mainly to the highlands of Colombia, southern Brazil, and parts of northeast Uruguay and Paraguay and northern Argentina.
It is an evergreeb shrub or small tree (up to 23 feet tall) and is a warm-temperate, subtropical plant. It requires winter chilling in order to produce fruit; thus it is frost tolerant. Its leaves have a silver luster to their bottoms. The flowers have five whitish petals which are puffy. There are about 25 dark red stamens projecting from the center of the flower. This flower produces fruit (they resemble limes), which is popular in places like New Zealand.
There are numerous varieties (cultivars) of this plant. This flower grows well in the western, southern, and southeastern margins of the United States. It grows well in USDA Zone 10 (Wikipedia, 2026).
Classification
Kingdom Plantae
Clades (4 of them)
Order Myrtales
Family Myrtaceae [= Myrtle family]
Genus Feijoa
Type Species F. sellowiana
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Polygala myrtifolia = myrtle-leaf milkwort flower
This flower grows on 2 to 4 m tall shrubs (or small trees) that originated in the southern coasts of South Africa. It is fast growing and can be found living on dunes. It is also found in forest margins, next to streams and open grasslands. This plant has been introduced to coastal area of California, New Zealand, and Australia. It is typically regarded to be an environmental weed. The word “milk” was incorporated into the common name of this flower because it was throught that this plant stimulated milk production in European cows. Its flowers have a characteristic brush-like tuff protruding from the keel area.