It's called Holly Leaf Miner. Adult flies lay an egg in the leaf in late spring/summer, larvae hatch and eat inside the leaf. They remain in the...
It's a disease that sycamores get called Tar Spot. The tree will now get it every year, but it will do it little harm. It will not affect other...
It doesn't look like an Irish Yew to me, more like English Yew that has been trimmed to a cone shape. The bronzing looks like a physiological...
Its Colutea arborescens, the Bladder Senna.
It could be a species of Lactuca (wild lettuce), though not too sure about it. Did the leaves or stems exude any white sap when cut? Lactuca...
It's Nandina domestica.
It could be Chamaecyparis pisifera Squarrosa.
They should do.
The second one looks like Phlox to me.
The other one looks like Osteospermum, a perennial but not hardy.
Barb, it sounds like yours are shield bugs, which won't do your plants any harm.
It looks like capsid bug damage, Caryopteris and Fuchsias are some of their favourite plants. They feed on the buds, then when the buds grow the...
Aesculus is right, it's Pokeweed, Phytolacca americana.
Looks like just normal bloom on the stems to me, therefore no problem!
I didn't want to post under my real name of Daisy.
Seeing the new photos I will stick with Photinia Red Robin. Stranvaesia as a genus no longer exists, it was re-named Photinia some years ago,...
Why don't you take a piece to your local garden centre and ask them to identify it for you? Seeing it in the flesh rather than in a picture will...
It's a Photinia Red Robin. Portugese laurel (Prunus lusitanica) has a narrower leaf, with a more pointed tip, and also has small stipules at the...
It's a Photinia x fraseri Red Robin. You describe what it does with its leaves perfectly. It's easy to look after, just prune in spring or summer...
Looks correct for Fuchsia Delta's Sara to me. Blue Fuchsia are never a true blue.
Separate names with a comma.