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Virginia
Sweetspires
Virginia
Sweetspire, Itea virginica is an easy and
outstanding shrub to grow. It produces white
fragrant flowers in May each year. It is very
adaptable doing well in full sun to heavy shade,
tolerates a wide range of pH and soil
conditions--from moist to dry. It also has
outstanding fall foliage.
Illiciums
Another group
of native shrubs is the Illiciums or Anise
plants. Illicium floridanum comes in white or
red flowered varieties. The Illicium parviflorum
is a hardier performer and produces a larger
mass planting. Makes a good screening or hedge
plant in a shady, moist area in your yard. The
Florida anise plants look better in more shade.
If exposed to much sunlight, they tend to be a
thinner plant.
Azaleas
The number
one landscape shrub tends to be the azalea. But
there are native azaleas that can be a wonderful
addition to your landscape. You can get colors
and scents unheard of in evergreen hybrids, and
they are much more tolerant of our weather
conditions--both summer and winter. The only
downside for some people, is that they aren’t
evergreen. These shrubs can grow quite large in
time, and typically bloom in mid to late spring.
One of the most fragrant of these is
Rhododendron alabamense, the Alabama azalea. It
produces white flowers, blotched in yellow and
can grow up to eight feet in height.
Rhododendron arborescens or the Sweet Azalea
produces white to pink azaleas with red styles,
grows five to six feet in height. The Flame
azaleas, Rhododendron calendulaceum produces
some wonderful yellow and orange varieties. So
instead of opting for all evergreens, plant some
of these or other wonderful deciduous varieties.
They will pay you back with graceful blooms
every spring without the fuss of the evergreen
type.
Viburnums
There are
also some nice selections of viburnums which are
native. Most people are familiar with the
snowball bush--(which is a viburnum, just not
native). Some native members of the family
include Arrowwood viburnum, Viburnum dentatum.
Indians used the stalks of this plant to make
arrows, since the wood was strong and straight.
It will form a large shrub with white flowers in
late spring to early summer. Viburnum nudum is
another early summer white bloomer, with rapid
growth. Following flowering clusters of berries
form which change colors over time. ‘Count
Pulaski’ is an introduced plant from Ridgecrest
Nursery. Viburnum prunifolium, the Blackhaw
viburnum will grow quite large, forming a small
tree or large shrub. Similar in appearance to a hawthorne tree, it has small white flower heads
in May, followed by a berry.
Taller
Natives
As you can
see, you have more options than you knew when it
comes to native shrubs. If you need taller
plants--those we could call tall bushes or small
trees, you could also plant the fabulous native Grancy Greybeard, Old Man’s Beard or White
Fringe Tree-- Chionanthus virginicus. It’s
clusters of white fringe like flowers in the
spring last longer and, to many, beat a dogwood,
hand down. They also require a lot less care.
There are also numerous magnolias for the
landscape. While many think only about the
large-growing Southern Magnolia, there are some
great native varieties with a smaller size.
These include Sweetbay magnolia, Magnolia
virginiana, the Bigleaf Magnolia--Magnolia
macrophylla, and if you want something almost
tropical in appearance, plant the Umbrella
Magnolia, Magnolia tripetela. It has the
appearance of a giant scheffelera in your
garden, and it’s hardy.
Woody Natives
While this is
not the only native woody shrubs that we can
grow, it is a good start. Some will be easier to
find than others, but check with your local
nursery to see what they have. There are also a
few nurseries in the state that specialize in
native plants. While I don’t recommend digging
up every non-native plant in your yard, to plant
all native plants--add a few natives and see how
you like them. NEVER, go searching these plants
in the wild to plant in your yard. If everyone
did that, there would be none left for the rest
of us. Unless you own the property, you don’t
have the right to dig anything up. Its also
healthier on the plant, and easier for you to
purchase them from a reputable nursery. If your
yard needs some local flavor, or some
interesting new plants that can almost take care
of themselves--plant native shrubs. |