Dear Ladies and Gentlemen!
Our Salon is situated on Kiev, Desyatinnaya street 1/3
Working time 9-20 (Without a Day Off 10.00-18.00).
To order the bouquet or composition, you could call the number:
+380 44 2788345, +380 44 2339332,
+380 44 2339342, +380 44 2339352,
+380 50 4409383
Callback (round-the-clock technical support)
or to order Online and pay for your order with a help of any mentioned here way of payment. flowers delivery: in Kiev / Ukraine / CIS & Baltic States / worldwide international
Today : 23.05.2012 г
NEAREST HOLIDAYS AND NAME-DAYS
23.05
-
Simeon
24.05
-
Day of Slavic literature and culture
25.05
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Day of Kiev
26.05
-
Alexander, Georgy, Irina
27.05
-
Day of publishing workers, polygraphy and booksell
Служба доставки: +380 44 5455455, +380 93 1770565, +380 50 4194349, +380 67 6592918.
Салон цветов: +380 44 2788345.
Technical support 24 hours:
+380 50 4106465
(круглосуточно)
или оформив заказ через Интернет и оплатив его одним из указанных здесь способов
Description:
A bulb is an underground vertical shoot that has modified leaves (or thickened leaf bases) that are used as food storage organs by a dormant plant. Other types of storage organs (such as corms, rhizomes, and tubers) are sometimes erroneously referred to as bulbs. The correct term for plants that form underground storage organs, including bulbs as well as tubers and corms, is geophyte.
A bulb's leaf bases generally do not support leaves, but contain food reserves to enable the plant to survive adverse conditions. The leaf bases may overlap and surround the center of the bulb as with lilies, or may completely surround the inner regions of the bulb, as with the onion. A modified stem forms the base of the bulb, and plant growth occurs from this basal plate. Roots emerge from the underside of the base, and new stems and leaves from the upper side.
Some epiphytic orchids (family Orchidaceae) form bulb-like, above-ground storage organs called pseudobulbs.
Some lilies form small bulbs called bulbils in their leaf axils. Several members of the onion family, Alliaceae, including Allium sativum (garlic), form bulbils in their flower heads, sometimes as the flowers fade, or even instead of the flowers. The so-called "Tree Onion" (Allium cepa var. proliferum) forms small onions which are large enough for pickling.