Locally known as Camia. This plant is an erect ground herb with stout rootstock, to 1 m tall. Its leaves are distichous, short-petioled, oblong-lanceolate to lanceolate, acuminate and to 40 cm long. The spike is ellipsoid and to 10 cm long, bracts are green, ovate, or rounded, each with 2-3 flowers. The flowers are white and very fragrant, with tubular calyx, and slender corolla tube. The lobes are white, narrow-obovate, pale yellow at the center and to 6cm in diameter. It is native to India and widely cultivated in the Philippines, propagated by rhizome division.
Heliotropium indicum
Locally known as Buntot Leon; Higad-higaran. An erect, annual, branched herb up to 100 cm high, leaves; opposite sometimes alternate, ovate to ob-ovate, margins are toothed, somewhat hairy, acute or acuminate, base extending towards the stem below the insertion of the petiole, winged stalk, inflorescence; terminal or leaf-opposed, narrow spikes drooping or curved at the tip with many small lavender flowers appearing in rows of dense clusters, the lower ones opening first.
Hemigraphis X "Exotica"
A leafy herb closely tucked to the earth, leaves; margin is finely serrated, distinct brown midrid, acute or acuminate, glossy surface, flowers; in terminal loose spikes, large bract, overlapping, solitary. tubular corolla, lower part is cylindric or funnel shaped and swells as it ascend, various range of colors from pale-blue to purplish, 5-lobed.