FUN WITH UFOS
Horticulture|November - December 2023
Land some Unusual Floral Objects to make the neighbors wonder
MAX J.EBER
FUN WITH UFOS

Sometimes we all want that one curiosity in the garden to get people talking. That unique plant that’s a little… weird. A little…out of this world. But who needs an intergalactic trip when

there are many unusual plants native to the United States, and often your own backyard? And while Earth’s oddest plants can demand special care, these surprisingly widespread natives are easy to grow and will still wow:

Buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis; Zones 4b–11) is a charming three-season shrub that will “make you believe.” A widespread East Coast to Midwest North American native with extant ranges dotted west toward California and south to Mexico, this shrub is found along wetland margins. Therefore it thrives in marshy, wet, clay conditions—but it tolerates more upland loam and moist garden soils, too. With its deep roots, buttonbush provides excellent erosion control for rain gardens, embankments, and low, pooling or washout-prone drainage spots and gullies. It grows in full sun or part shade.

This is a large shrub, reaching six to twelve feet tall and wide with a spreading, rounded habit. It can attain tree-like branching with age. Shiny, flame-shaped leaves emerge chartreuse in spring and age to medium to dark green and lengths of three to eight inches. The foliage makes buttonbush a beautiful screening plant, but its true space-age appeal comes midsummer, with the tiny, round, composite, pale-green buds forming at the end of branches. These soon explode into inch-round fuzzy, honey-scented white to shell-pink pompom flowers. Butterflies, bees, hummingbirds, children and adults are all drawn as if by a tractor beam to the oddball sight!

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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November - December 2023-Ausgabe von Horticulture.

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