Cistuses are suitable for sunny gardens with a nearly frost-free
Mediterranean climate. The hardiest of the species is
C. laurifolius, which survived the hard frost at
Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew in 1895 that eliminated all the cistuses save this and two white-flowered natural hybrids,
C. ×
corbariensis, already grown by
John Tradescant the Elder, and
C. ×
loretii, a 19th-century introduction. •
C. ×
argenteus 'Peggy Sammons' - pink flowers, grey-green leaves •
C. ×
cyprius •
C. ×
cyprius var.
ellipticus 'Elma' •
C. ×
dansereaui 'Decumbens' •
C. ×
dansereaui 'Jenkyn Place' •
C. ×
florentinus - white flowers •
C. 'Gordon Cooper' •
C. ×
hybridus - pink buds, white flowers •
C. ×
laxus 'Snow White' •
C. ×
lenis 'Grayswood Pink' •
C. ×
obtusifolius 'Thrive' • '
C. 'Paladin' - large white flowers, dark green leaves •
C. ×
pulverulentus 'Sunset' •
C. × purpureus - pink petals with dark blotches near centre - small pink flowers •
C. 'Snow Fire' • ×
Halimiocistus 'Ingwersenii' • ×
Halimiocistus sahucii {{cite web | url = https://www.rhs.org.uk/Plants/99428/x-Halimiocistus-sahucii/Details
Gallery File:Cistus ladanifer hybride.JPG|
Cistus ×
dansereaui File:Cistus-hybridus.jpg|
Cistus ×
hybridus File:Cistus purpureus.jpg|
Cistus ×
purpureus File:Cistus skanbergii + Cistus verguinii-Clapiers-4144~2015 05 03.JPG|
Cistus ×
skanbergii (pale pink) and
Cistus ×
verguinii (white and spotted) == References ==