| |
| |
 |
| |
Winterberry holly >>>download
photo |
|
|
| |
January Gardening
Tips
|
|
|
| |
Feeling the post-holiday blues? Bundle up and go
outside to enjoy the swishing sounds of many ornamental
grasses and brightly colored berries on hollies and
crabapples. If you need something more productive to do,
the University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture
recommends these gardening tasks to brighten your winter
or make your spring chores less hectic. >>>read the
article
| UT Gardens' Plant of the Month: Winterberry
Holly
by
Jeffrey K. Webb
January seems to be the darkest, coldest month of the year,
but not all is dreary in the winter garden. Many of the
hollies are full of red fruit. Old garden friends like the
evergreen Burford Holly (Ilex cornuta 'Burfordii'),
Foster Holly (Ilex x attenuata 'Fosteri') and
American Holly (Ilex opaca) are reliably full of
berries. However, not all hollies are evergreen. Some of the
best hollies present their berries on bare stems. Among the
top choices of deciduous hollies is the aptly named
Winterberry (Ilex verticillata).
Winterberry occurs naturally in swamps, roadside ditches,
and other poorly drained areas, often growing with the entire
root system submerged for most of the year. This makes
Winterberry a good choice for planting in poorly drained areas
of the landscape. It also grows well in ordinary garden soil,
but best growth and fruiting occurs when the plants do not
experience drought. While a Winterberry may grow to a height
of 16 feet in the wild, in the landscape the plant will seldom
exceed 10 feet. The plant makes an oval to rounded-oval shape,
with fine, twiggy branches. It can sucker to make colonies,
but seldom does.
When the autumn leaves are falling, the Winterberry fruit
is coloring. The bright red berries persist for months on its
thin, dark branches, creating a striking picture when laden
with snow or displayed against a dark, evergreen background.
Gardeners can expect the branches to be heavy with fruit well
into mid-winter. The berries are bitter and astringent, so
other food supplies will dwindle before overwintering
chickadees, blue jays and other birds zero in on the
Winterberry fruit. Berries that persist until spring are a
favorite of cedar waxwings.
Winterberry grows throughout the eastern half of the U.S.,
except in West Virginia and most of Kentucky. The closely
related Possum Haw (Ilex decidua) is larger and more
tree-like, with fruit that is red-orange in color. It is more
tolerant of drought and alkaline soils, and is more cold hardy
than Winterberry. Numerous selected varieties of both
Winterberry and Possum Haw are valuable for use in the
landscape.
The Winterberry variety known as Winter RedŽ is noted for
having fruit that persists in good condition for a long time.
Winter RedŽ is compact, growing to a mature size of nine feet
tall and eight feet wide. The large, pea-sized fruits are an
intense red and are borne in great profusion. Cut stems are
reported to keep in good condition indoors for months if
not kept in water. Released by the U.S. National
Arboretum, the hybrid variety 'Sparkleberry' grows 12 to 15
feet tall with an upright form. Another widely used hybrid,
'Red Sprite' grows to three to five feet and is compact and
rounded in shape, with lustrous green leaves and large,
abundant berries.
Hollies have either all male flowers or all female flowers,
so to have fruit, the gardener must have one male to supply
the pollen for every five to seven females, which bear the
fruit. Pollinate the Winterberry with the males 'Apollo,'
'Southern Gentleman,' or 'Jim Dandy'. Males should be
available at a local garden center or nursery.
Use Winterberry to grace the edge of a pond, where the
constant moisture will encourage the plants to form colonies.
If you don't have a pond, plant Winterberry where it can show
off its fruit against a hedge, an evergreen tree, or a
building. Berry-bearing branches are more effective in the
landscape when displayed against a dark background.
Winterberry holly has clean foliage through the summer, but
its outstanding winter interest can make this low-care shrub
the star of your winter garden.
###
Jeffrey K. Webb is a graduate student in the University of
Tennessee Department of Plant
Sciences. He works under the guidance of Dr. Susan
Hamilton, director of the UT Gardens. The UT Gardens are located on Neyland Drive in
Knoxville. They are free and open to the public seven days a
week during daylight hours.
|
|