Product Details:
| Color | Multicolor |
| Height / Size | 4 feet |
| Usage | Decoration ,outdoor |
| Scientific Name | Bougainvillea glabr |
| Temprature | Ideal daytime temperatures: 21-35 DegreeC (70-95 DegreeF). |
| Flower Type | The true flowers are small, tubular, and usually white. |
The showy parts are the brightly colored bracts (modified leaves) that surround the flowers.
Multicolor bougainvillea has bracts in multiple colors on the same plant, often created through grafting or mixing cultivars.
It’s a sun-loving, heat-tolerant plant, so full sun encourages abundant flowering.
Product Details:
| Minimum Order Quantity | 1 Piece |
| Type of Plant | Bugan bell |
| Color | multicolor |
| Soil Specific | Clay |
| Size/Dimension | 7 ft |
| Usage/Application | All |
| Bloom Time | Summer Bloom |
The term "Bugan Bell Multicolor" refers to a type of multicolor bougainvillea plant, a popular ornamental woody vine known for its vibrant display of leaf-like bracts.
Description of the Multicolor Bougainvillea
Bracts (the "flowers"): The most striking feature of the plant is not its actual flowers, but its modified leaves, called bracts. These thin, papery, and pliable bracts surround the true flowers and come in a wide range of bright colors, including pink, magenta, purple, red, orange, white, and yellow. The "multicolor" variety typically features a mix of these colors on the same plant or in the same garden space.
True Flowers: The actual flowers are small, waxy, and generally white or yellowish in color, often overshadowed by the showy bracts.
Foliage: The plant has dark green, ovate to heart-shaped leaves that grow in an alternate arrangement.
Growth Habit: It is a climbing, sprawling shrub or vine with thorny stems, using its sharp, curved thorns to scramble over other plants or structures. It can grow from 3 to 39 feet tall depending on the variety and growing conditions.
Uses: Due to its vibrant appearance and low maintenance requirements (once established, it is drought-resistant and needs full sun), it is a popular landscaping plant, often used in gardens, on walls, fences, and trellises, or grown in containers.
Common Names: It is also known by other names such as Veranera, Camelina, Bugambilias, and most commonly, Paper Flowers.
Important Considerations
Some parts of the plant's thorns are coated in a substance that can cause skin irritation or rashes in some individuals. While some parts of the plant are used in traditional medicine, care should always be taken when ingesting new plants.