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| I'm looking for a nice showpiece shrub or even small tree for beside our wooden deck stairs where a rhododendron used to be (but died due to fungus, pretty sure it was Botryosphaeria dothidea, dying in chunks). What should I avoid planting there besides other rhodos due to the fungus, I know other rhodos are a no-no.
I'm a big plant geek so I love unusual and very beautiful things (don't we all?) so most common shrubs aren't very attractive to me. I will never plant or recommend a cherry laurel ever again. I've been in love with our totally underrated native evergreens like leucothoe, such a beautiful shrub but that would be too short for what I'm looking for. I might be able to fit a few as companions/ankle socks but I'm wanting the shrub to be about the height of the deck but not block the view when sitting on a built in bench. I can take a picture of the site. I need about at 5-6ish ft tall (7 wouldn't hurt if it's softer visually) and 3-4 ft shrub or small tree, preferably evergreen and can handle partial shade from a big weeping cherry. I was considering the following, possibly variegated cultivars: illicium
I'm sort of torn, as everything seems to have a drawback. it's a pretty big focal spot in this nook that is along the the stairs to our deck. Along the rest of the deck is a promenade of 'Nikko Blue' hydrangea which have finally matured and look amazing architectural wise this winter, this summer will be amazing. The points against illex is that the stairs have no railings and we already have a noisette rose on an obelisk that grabs people on the other side. Don't need more pricking people. Are illicum worth planting in such a focal spot? I want some nice architecture there and it needs the evergreen foliage due to the hydrangea being bare in winter, also need a good contrast to Nikko's bright green lettuce leaves. I can't seem to get a good picture of illicum bush online much everyone just takes pictures of the flowers, which I think I remember smelling at a nursery and was shocked at how not very pleasant it was so there the doubt there that would be a great fit either. Camellia are starting to be planted here more and more, especially the cold hardy ones that I have no trouble with. I was considering moving a sasquana hybrid 'Frost Princess' that has been doing nothing in a shadier spot elsewhere over there where it can get more sun but that plant is TINY literally 24-32" tops, it would take much too long for it to fill in. We have a large fuchsia/hot pink antique evergreen azalea that is parallel to said spot about 3-5 meters away and the whole area is shaded by a giant weeping cherry so spring show is pretty covered, another reason why I was considering the fall blooming camellia. Spread the interest so to speak. A cultivar like 'Shibori-egao' is exactly what sets my interest off, though too tall for this spot. Any suggestions? I would love if it could be a native and have additional uses other than ornament but anything that has pretty form would be great. Again, I can take a picture today of the spot and post it to give a better idea. |
Follow-Up Postings:
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| Bigger than Leucothoe is Agarista populifolia. There are Ilex without spines like Ilex cassine (Dahoon holly) and Ilex glabra (Inkberry). Yes, Illicium floridanum makes a handsome shrub - I have quite a few, people always think it is a rhododendron. It would like a little moisture. |
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- Posted by butterfly4u 8 (My Page) on Fri, Feb 24, 12 at 0:05
| Consider "Chuck Hayes" Gardenia. A man in Philadelphia had one that he was asking for pruning instructions on because it had grown to be 5 feet tall in 3 years and was getting really big. They are evergreen and love shade, especailly in the afternoon. They can bloom off and on all summer, but they really bloom in the spring and fall. As far as smell, well, it's a gardenia, a double flower. Only the "Chuck Hayes" blooms like that and is cold hardy to your zone. Just don't drown it. |
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