No landscaper? If it was a group of gardeners volunteering their time, they are the landscapers. Also, no Guru needed. Only necessary to visit the local nurseries where plants are most often purchased and inquire what is the currently most popular Ixora of that color. Here in the US we have what we call Master Gardeners and some turn to them for advice - perhaps you have an equivalent group where you live?
Not necessarily developed by smart gardeners in their own garden, but rather hybridised by someone who will have patented the plant or at least applied for a patent. The application for patent will have the most minute details. Tjoe Foeng Jin applied for patent 'Pink Pixie'; this plant is now growing in rather too many gardens in Florida and Georgia. https://patents.google.com/patent/USPP15026P2/en Other patented Ixora can be excluded due to bloom color such as: 1994 Diana Zaandam's 'Diora' has white blooms Occasionally, a garden plant will create a sport (I recall my father going into great detail to explain how we should always look for sports); the gardener can, after much work, apply for a patent for what began as a sport. 1995 Fabia C Pitman's 'Frankie Hipp' has white blooms with petals having thin pink margins - it began as a sport on a 'Nora Grant' Ixora After a new Ixora is discovered/developed, one needs a grower and then a supplier. IndiaMart lists several of these: https://dir.indiamart.com/impcat/ixora-plant.html On Wednesday, October 2, 2019 at 8:35:13 AM UTC-4, dr.rakesh Singh wrote: > > This Ixora is dwarf =3 feet , smaller flowers petal less than 1 cm tube > about 2.5 cm , petals 4 occasionally 5 . > Small leaves = 4-6 cm long 2-3 cm wide , no hairs , fleshy crunchy , > pink , red . > Ornamental in my apartment complex , Surat city , Gujarat > Today morning , 02 10 2019 > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "efloraofindia" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to indiantreepix+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/indiantreepix/a157c04c-5bf8-4987-a197-b6b220e43cf3%40googlegroups.com.