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February 3rd - Plants of Interest

2/3/2014

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PictureJasminium nudiflorum
Nature has many scenes to exhibit, and constantly draws a curtain over this part or that. She is constantly repainting the landscape and all surfaces, dressing up some scene for our entertainment. Lately we had a leafy wilderness; now bare twigs begin to prevail, and soon she will surprise us with a mantle of snow. Some green she thinks so good for our eyes that, like blue, she never banishes it entirely from our eyes, but has created evergreens. Henry David Thoreau, 1858

Jasminium nudiflorum, Winter Jasmine Family: Oleaceae
Pefect solitary yellow flowers, non-fragrant Jan- March peaking in Feb.  Great for banks and poor soil, stems green 4 sided.

Pieris japonica, Japanese Pieris  Family: Ericaceae
Alternate, simple, evergreen leaves, obovate-oblong, new growth bronze green.  Buds form in summer prior to year of flower, valid identification.  Zone 4-7, needs shade in 7.  Red foliage cultivars like Mountain Fire. Spectacular.  Flower perfect, weakly fragrant, white, urn-shaped, ¼” long March-April born in 3”-6” long and wide pendulous racemose panicales.

Hamamelis x intermedia ‘Jelena’, Hybrid witchhazel  Family: Hamamelidaceae
Hybrid cross between japonica and mollis with intermediate characteristics.  Hybrid vigor -15’-20’ high.  Red-yellow flowers Jan-Mid March in North.  Arnolds Promise good yellow, Jelena glows like copper, in feb, great fall color

Hamamelis virginiana, common witch hazel  Family: Hamamelidaceae
Flowers Oct-Dec, native to eastern US

Mahonia bealei (Mahonia japonica), Leatherleaf Mahonia  Family: Berberidaceae
Clumsy, upright, coarse evergreen.  Leaves alternate, compound pinnate, 9-13 leaflets, rigid, terminal leaflet larger than laterals.  Flowers lemon yellow and v fragrant, December –April.  Fruit blueish berry maturing July

Ilex pedunculosa, Longstalk holly  Family: Aquifoliaceae
Alternate, simple, evergreen ovate, persistent for 3 years, wavy margins.   20-30’ in height, large shrub or small tree of dense habit and handsome foliage.  V beautiful lustrous dark green leaf in summer, berry-like red dupe on female plants borne singly on 1”-2” pedicels.  No diseases .  One of the hardiest evergreen red-fruiting hollies, should be more used, one of the most handsome that can be grown in north, birds relish berries..  Slow to medium growth

Sciadopitys verticillata, Japanese Umbrella Pine Family: Sciadopityaceae
Two kinds of leaves, some small and scale-like scattered on the shoot but crowded at the end and bearing in their axils a whorl of 10-30 linear flat leaves, each 2”-5” long, furrowed on each side, almost prehistoric in appearance.  The way the needles radiate around the stem creates an inside-out “umbrella” effect.  Handsome bark exfoliating in strips but hidden by foliage.  20’-30’ extremely slow growth (6” year).  Cones green at first, ripen to brown 2nd year..  For foliage and texture ranks among best.

Metasequoia glyptostroboides, Dawn Redwood Family: Cupressaceae
Decidious, opposite in arrangement, linear, flattened, fast growth in east.  Reddish brown bark when young, base buttressing and developing irregular fluted character, directly below branch attachements are armpit-like depressions which are good ID

Sequoia sempervirens, Coast Redwood Family: Cupressaceae
Evergreen, needles spirally arranged on the terminal leader, ¼” long, 40’60’ in east, west 300’  Imposing conifer, densely branched and pyramidal in youth, exquisite bark

Cunninghamia lanceolata, China Fir  Family: Cupressaceae
Evergreen, spirally arranged, those on main axis stand out from all around the stem, those on the underside of the branches turning upwards by a basal twist so al seem to appear to spring from the sides and surface of the shoot.  Persist for 5+ years, remain dead and dry on branches for more years.  30-75’ in height, pyramidal with slightly pendulous branches, giving appearance of exotic looking tree.  Grows anywhere.  Attractive in youth, seedy with age as old needles cling to branches.    Wood prized in china, easily worked, coffins. 

Cephalotaxus Harringtonia, Japanese plum yew  Family: Cephalotaxaceae
Linear, evergreen spirally arranged in 2 planes forming distinct V-shaped trough  Amazing heat tolerance and dear resistant, slow growth.  Potential not tapped, superb shade tolerant aristocratic evergreen for groupings.   Fastigiata – rotund columnar form 10’ tall and 6-8’ wide.  Duke Gardens – 2-3’ tall and 3’4’ wide. 

Taxus baccata ‘dovastonii’, English Yew  Family: Taxaceae
Spirally arranged, spreading all around in erect shoots, linear, 30-60’ high and 15-25’ spread.  Tree or shrub like form, beautiful with dense dark somber pyramidal outline and massive, fluted, rich reddish brown trunk.   English churchyards. Take shade.  Most toxic of plants, ancient 3000yrs

Tsuga Canadensis ‘pendula’, Weeping Canada Hemlock  Family: Pinaceae
If Dirr forced to select one conifer it would be this.  One of most graceful and beautiful.  Leaf blight, cankers rust, hemlock borer and looper, spider mites … Used by water, green waterfall.

Pinus bungeana, Lacebark pine  Family: Pinaceae
Three needles persisting 3-4 years, stiff, apex sharp pointed 2”-4” long, margins finely toothed, inside slightly rounded because of raised midrib.  Slow growth, bark exfoliating like plane tree.  One of most handsome pines for bark.  Can break under heavy snow.

Quercus imbricaria, Shingle Oak  Family: Fagaceae
Still has alternate, simple, oblong leaves. 


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December 2nd - Plants of Interest

12/2/2013

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PicturePoncirus trifoliata
"Let no one be discouraged by how much there is to learn.  Looking back upon nearly thirty years of gardenng ... each new step becomes a little surer, and each new grasp a little firmer, till, little by little, comes the power of intelligent combinations, the nearest thiing we can know to the mighty force of creation."  Wood and Garden, Gertrude Jekyll

Abelia x grandiflora  glossy Abelia 
 Acer japonicum Japanese Maple 
 Acer palmatum Japanese Maple 
 Aronia arbutifolia  red chokeberry(corner of patio) 
 Betula lenta Sweet Birch 
 Camellia sasanqua Camellia sasanqua 
 Catalpa ovata  Chinese Catalpa 
 Cedrus atlantica Atlas Cedar 
 Ceridiphyllum japonicum Katsura 
 Chionanthus retusus Chinese Fringe tree 
 Cladrastis kentukea American Yellowwood 
 Cornus florida Dogwood 
 Corylus americana American Hazel 
 Cotoneaster divercatus  spreading cotoneaster (beginning of path) 
 Elaeagnus commutata  Silverberry 
 Elaeagnus pungens  Thorny elaeagnus 
 Fagus sylvatica  European Beech 
 Franklinea alatamaha  Franklin tree 
 Ginkgo biloba Maidenhair tree Gymnocladus dioicus Kentucky Coffee Tree 
 Hamamelis virginiana  Common witch hazel 
 Heptacodium miconiodes  Seven-son flower 
 Ilex decidua  Possumhaw 
 Ilex pedunculosa  longstalk holly 
 Ilex x Rutzan Red Beauty Holly 
 Ilex verticillata  common winterberry 
 Jasminum nudiflorum Winter Jasmine 
 Koelreuteria bipinnata  Goldenrain tree 
 Larix kaempferi Japanese Larch 
 Liquidambar styraciflua  American Sweetgum 
 Liriodendron tulipifera Tulip Poplar 
 Magnolia grandiflora  Southern magnolia 
 Malus spp crabapple 
 Metasequoia glyptostroboides Dawn Redwood 
 Nandina domestica Heavenly Bamboo 
 Osmanthus armatus False holly 
 Osmanthus heterophyllus  False holly 
Poncirus trifoliata Trifoliate orange
 Paulownia tomentosa Empress Tree 
 Parrotia Persica Persian Parrotia 
 Phellodendron chinense Chinese cork tree  
 Phellodendron japonicum   
 Phellodendron sachalinense    Pinus bungeana LaceBark Pine 
 Platanus x acerifolia London Plane tree 
 Pinus bungeana LaceBark Pine 
 Pseudolarix amabilis  golden-larch 
 Quercus alba White oak 
 Quercus coccinea  Scarlet oak 
 Quercus rubra  Red oak (next to B. arb) 
 Rhodotypos scandens  black jet bead 
 Stewartia koreana Stewartia  
 Stewartia monodelpha  Stewartia  
 Stewartia pseudocamelia Japanese stewartia 
 Symphonicarpos orbiculatus Coral berry 
 Taxodium distichum  Common baldcypress 
 Tetradium danielii (formally Evodia danielli)  Korean Evodia 
 Ulmus parvifolia Chinese Elm
Zanthoxylum simulans  Flatspine Prickly-ash

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November 25th - Plants of Interest

11/25/2013

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PictureKoelreuteria bipinnata
"I prefer winter and fall, when you feel the bone structure of the landscape - the loneliness of it, the dead feeling of winter. Something waits beneath it, the whole story doesn't show."  Andrew Wyeth

Abelia x grandiflora  glossy Abelia 
 Acer palmatum Japanese Maple 
 Aronia arbutifolia  red chokeberry(corner of patio) 
 Betula lenta Sweet Birch 
 Camellia sasanqua Camellia sasanqua 
 Catalpa ovata  Chinese Catalpa 
 Cedrus atlantica Atlas Cedar 
 Ceridiphyllum japonicum Katsura 
 Chionanthus retusus Chinese Fringe tree 
 Cladrastis kentukea American Yellowwood 
 Cornus florida Dogwood 
 Corylus americana American Hazel 
 Cotoneaster divercatus  spreading cotoneaster (beginning of path) 
 Edgeworthia chrysantha Paperbush 
 Elaeagnus commutata  Silverberry 
 Elaeagnus pungens  Thorny elaeagnus 
 Fagus sylvatica  European Beech 
 Franklinea alatamaha  Franklin tree 
 Ginkgo biloba Maidenhair tree 
 Gymnocladus dioicus Kentucky Coffee Tree 
 Hamamelis virginiana  Common witch hazel 
 Hedera helix English Ivy 
 Heptacodium miconiodes  Seven-son flower 
 Hydrangea Paniculata "Unique" Pannicle Hydangea 
 Ilex decidua  Possumhaw 
 Ilex pedunculosa  longstalk holly 
 Ilex x Rutzan Red Beauty Holly 
 Ilex verticillata  common winterberry 
 Jasminum nudiflorum Winter Jasmine 
 Koelreuteria bipinnata  Goldenrain tree 
 Larix kaempferi Japanese Larch 
 Liquidambar styraciflua  American Sweetgum 
 Liriodendron tulipifera Tulip Poplar 
 Magnolia grandiflora  Southern magnolia 
 Malus spp crabapple 
 Metasequoia glyptostroboides  Dawn Redwood 
 Nandina domestica Heavenly Bamboo 
 Osmanthus armatus False holly 
 Osmanthus heterophyllus  False holly 
 Pseudolarix amabilis  golden-larch 
 Paulownia tomentosa (Royal Paulownis, Empress Tree, Princess Tree) 
 Parrotia Persica Persian Parrotia 
 Phellodendron chinense Chinese cork tree  
 Phellodendron japonicum   
 Phellodendron sachalinense   
 Platanus occidentalis American plane 
 Platanus orientalis Oriental Plane 
 Platanus x acerifolia London Plane tree 
 Poncirus trifoliata  Hardy-orange 
 Pseudolarix amabilis  golden-larch 
 Quercus alba White oak 
 Quercus coccinea  Scarlet oak 
 Quercus rubra  Red oak (next to B. arb) 
 Rhodotypos scandens  black jet bead 
 Stewartia koreana Stewartia  
 Stewartia monodelpha  Stewartia  
 Stewartia pseudocamelia Japanese stewartia 
 Symphonicarpos orbiculatus Coral berry 
 Taxodium ascendens,  Pondcypress 
 Taxodium distichum  Common baldcypress 
 Tetradium danielii (formally Evodia danielli)  Korean Evodia 
 Ulmus parvifolia Chinese Elm 
 Virburnum rhytidophyllum Leatherleaf Viburnum 
 Virburnum setigerum   Virburnum sieboldii   
 Viburnum x burkwoodii 'Conoy" Burkwood  Viburnum 
 Zanthoxylum simulans  Flatspine Prickly-ash

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October 21st - Plants of Interest

10/21/2013

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PictureEdgeworthia chrysantha
"Beauty.  This is a complex matter, consisting of the balance between color, shape, texture of blossom and structure, texture, bark, and so on, apart from the blossom.  If we are to understand beauty, or at least to recognize it, it is necessary to pay attention."  Henry Mitchell, The Essential Earthman

Abelia x grandiflora  Glossy Abelia 
 Acer palmatum "Bloodgood" Japanese Maple 
 Aronia arbutifilia Red Chokeberry 
 Betula lenta Sweet Birch 
 Camellia sasanqua Camellia 
 Catalpa ovata Chinese Catalpa 
 Chionanthus retusus Chinese Fringe Tree 
 Cladrastis kentukea American Yellowwood 
 Corylus americana American Hazel 
 Cotoneaster spp Cotoneaster 
 Edgeworthia chrysantha Paperbush 
 Elaeagnus commutata Silverberry 
 Elaeagnus pungens Thorny Elaeagnus 
 Franklinia altamaha Franklin Tree 
 Gymnocladus dioicus Kentucky Coffeetree 
 Heptacodium miconiodes  Seven-son flower 
 Hydrangea Paniculata 'Unique' Panicle Hydrangea 
 Ilex verticulata "winter gold' Winterberry 
 Ilex x Rutzan Red Beauty Holly 
 Koelreuteria bipinnata  Goldenrain tree 
 Magnolia grandiflolia Southern Magnolia 
 Malus Striped Beauty Crabapple 
 Malus x robusta 'Persicifolia' Crabapple 
 Phellodendron japonicum Japanese Corktree 
 Phellodendron sachalinense Sakhalin Corktree 
 Poncirus trifoliata  Hardy-orange 
 Quercus alba White Oak 
 Rhodotypos scandens Black jetbead 
 Sorbus terminalis Service Tree 
Symphoricarpos orbiculatus Coralberry 
 Tetradium daniellii Korean tetradium, Bee tree (formerly Evodia danielli 
 Ulmus parvifolia Chinese Elm 
 Viburnum setigerum Tea Viburnum 
 Viburnum x burkwoodii 'Conoy' Burkwood Viburnum 
 Zanthoxylum simulans  Flatspine Prickly-ash
 THE VIEW  -- Liriodendron tulipifera, Cornus florida, Cornus alternifolia Tuliptree, Tulip Poplar, Yellow Poplar, Flowering Dogwood 

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September 30th - Plants of Interest

9/30/2013

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PictureChionanthus retusus
"There are no green thumbs or black thumbs. There are only gardeners and non-gardeners. Gardeners are the ones who ruin after ruin get on with the high defiance of nature herself, creating, in the very face of her chaos and tornado, the bower of roses and the pride of irises. It sonds very well to garden a 'natural way.' You may see the natural way in any desert, any swamp, any leech-filled laurel hell. Defiance, on the other hand, is what makes gardeners."
Henry Mitchell, "On the Defiance of Gardeners", from The Essential Earthman.



Abelia x grandiflora  Glossy Abelia 
 Aronia arbutifilia Red Chokeberry 
 Chionanthus retusus Chinese Fringe Tree 
 Chionanthus virginicus White Fringe Tree 
 Cornus Kousa Dogwood 
 Elaeagnus commutata Silverberry 
 Euonymus hamiltonianus Yeddo Euonymus 
 Franklinia altamaha Franklin Tree 
 Gleditsia triacanthos (f. inermis) Common Honey Locust 
 Gymnocladus dioicus Kentucky Coffeetree 
 Heptacodium miconiodes  Seven-son flower 
 Koelreuteria bipinnata  Goldenrain tree 
 Koelreuteria paniculata  Panicled goldenraintree 
 Magnolia grandiflolia Southern Magnolia 
 Magnolia tripetala Umbrella Magnolia 
 Poncirus trifoliata  Hardy-orange 
 Rhodotypos scandens Black jetbead 
 Staphylea colchica Bladdernut 
 Staphylea trifolia Bladdernut 
 Tetradium daniellii Korean tetradium, Bee tree (formerly Evodia danielli)
 Ulmus parvifolia Chinese Elm 
 Zanthoxylum simulans  Flatspine Prickly-ash       
THE VIEW  -- Liriodendron tulipifera, Cornus florida Tuliptree, Tulip Poplar, Yellow Poplar, Flowering Dogwood 


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September 23rd - Plants of Interest

9/23/2013

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PictureAronia arbutifolia
"The wonder of gardening is that one becomes ia gardener by becoming a gardener.  Horticulture is sometimes described as a science, sometimes as an art, but the truth is that it is neither, though it partakes of both.  It is more like falling in love, something that escapes all logic."   The Gardeners Eye, Allen Lacy

Abelia x grandiflora   Glossy Abelia 
 Aronia arbutifilia Red Chokeberry 
 Aronia melanocarpa Black Chokeberry 
 Chaenomeles speciosa Common flowering quince 
 Franklinia altamaha Franklin Tree 
 Gleditsia triacanthos (f. inermis) Common Honey Locust 
 Gymnocladus dioicus Kentucky Coffeetree - According to Dirr:- "The leaves and seeds are poisonous to man, cattle.  Roasting the seed may destroy its toxic principals. I mention this because in my youth I ate the sweetish gummy substance that lined the inside of the pod.  Maybe that's what's wrong with me today." 
 Heptacodium miconiodes  Seven-son flower 
 Koelreuteria bipinnata  Goldenrain tree 
 Koelreuteria paniculata  Panicled goldenraintree 
 Lespedeza thunbergii Thuynberg Lespedeza 
 Magnolia grandiflolia Southern Magnolia 
 Magnolia macrophylla  bigleaf magnolia 
 Magnolia tripetala Umbrella Magnolia 
 Poncirus trifoliata  Hardy-orange 
 Tetradium daniellii Korean tetradium, Bee tree (formerly Evodia danielli)
 Zanthoxylum simulans  Flatspine Prickly-ash

 THE VIEW  -- Liriodendron tulipifera, Cornus florida Tuliptree, Tulip Poplar, Yellow Poplar, Flowering Dogwood 


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September 16th - Plants of interest

9/16/2013

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PictureAbelia x grandiflora
"I have been gardening now for over thirty years.  I have prowled around parks and pleasances in many corners of the earth and have read as widely as most: and yet, still they come, the new discoveries, the unknown beauties, like fresh young dancers who suddenly drift on to the stage as the ballet is drawing to a close."   Garden Open Today, Beverly Nichols

Abelia x grandiflora  Glossy Abelia 
 Chaenomeles speciosa Common flowering quince 
 Franklinia altamaha Franklin Tree 
 Heptacodium miconiodes  Seven-son flower 
 Koelreuteria bipinnata  Goldenrain tree 
 Koelreuteria paniculata  Panicled goldenraintree 
 Lespedeza thunbergii Lespedeza 
 Magnolia macrophylla  bigleaf magnolia 
 Magnolia tripetala Umbrella Magnolia 
 Poncirus trifoliata  Hardy-orange 
 Zanthoxylum simulans  Flatspine Prickly-ash
 THE VIEW  -- Liriodendron tulipifera Tuliptree, Tulip Poplar, Yellow Poplar 

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September 9th - Plants of Interest

9/9/2013

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PictureHeptacodium miconiodes - seven-son flower
"Let no one be discourgaged by how much there is to learn.  Looking back upon nearly thirty years of gardening .... each new step becomes a little surer, and each new grasp a little firmer, til, little by little, comes the power of intelligent combinations, the nearest thing we can kow to the mighty force of creation."   Wood and Gaden, Gertrude Jekyll

Abelia x grandiflora  Glossy Abelia 
 Heptacodium miconiodes  Seven-son flower 
 Koelreuteria bipinnata  Goldenrain tree 
 Koelreuteria paniculata  Panicled goldenraintree 
 Magnolia macrophylla  bigleaf magnolia 
 Poncirus trifoliata  Hardy-orange 
 Zanthoxylum simulans  Flatspine Prickly-ash

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