Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Springtime Blooming Indian Hawthorn Shrubs Available Locally at Sue's Greenhouse


ROXIE - The hard-working and low-maintenance Indian Hawthorns have star-shaped flowers held in loose clusters above evergreen foliage that is thick and leathery. 

Indian Hawthorn in Bloom
(Photo by MSU Extension Service/Gary Bachman)

As springtime arrives across Mississippi, azaleas are starting to put on their colorful show. While these walls of pink and clusters of red and spots of white are well-known and anticipated, a spring-blooming shrub that does not get as much attention is the Indian Hawthorn.

So, if your landscape needs a boost from spring-blooming shrubs, consider Indian Hawthorn selections when you go shopping at the local garden center.  One local garden center in the Franklin County area is Sue's Greenhouse located on Hwy 84 East, just east of Bude, Ms.  Ms. Sue Wallace, the owner, confirmed she carries the Indian Hawthorne in the 1 Ga container and the average price is $ 6.00 and up  However, as the demand continues she occasionally stocks the larger 3 Ga plant.  Sue's Greenhouse is open Wed - Sat from 8 AM till 5:00 PM and can be reached at 601-384-2976 for more information.  Sue's Greenhouse stocks wide selection of fruit trees such as apple, pear, apricot, plum, peach and fig.  Also, blueberry bush, muscadine (grape) plant and blackberry bush. However,  Ms Sue's "knows her stuff'" and is more than willing to share her love from her greenhouse.  

Indian Hawthorn is one of those hard-working shrubs that anchor many foundation plantings around our homes and landscapes. This shrub is one of the tough plants that will tolerate a wide variety of landscape conditions. It is used as a mainstay in many commercial landscapes and other low-maintenance locations.

It is precisely these attributes that make it perhaps the perfect evergreen shrub to plant in your home landscape. Indian Hawthorn is hardy in zones 7a through 10.

Franklin County is in Zone 8 - Picture compliments of Burpee, Inc.  

The fact that Indian Hawthorn has multi-season interest only adds to the reasons to plant it in your landscape.

In the spring, star-shaped flowers emerge in clusters held loosely at the ends of branches. Flower colors range from snow white to light pastel pink. On calm springs days, you may be rewarded by catching a hint of their delicate floral fragrance when you stroll by a hedge in bloom. The center structures -- pistil and stamens -- are reddish, and these match the color of the newly unfolding foliage, adding contrast to the flower color.

Indian Hawthorn produce fruit that are an attractive blue to black color. These ripen in the late summer and fall and will persist through the winter months. These berries are a good food source for many wildlife species.

The shrub’s evergreen foliage is thick and leathery to the touch. The top of the foliage is a lustrous dark green in the summer months, and when exposed to colder winter temperatures, it can turn a purplish-blue-green. The leaf margins have soft serrated edges that are highly variable.

Indian Hawthorn is easily kept less than 3 feet tall in the landscape. The shrub tolerates pruning especially well, but always wait to shape it after the bloom period in the spring.

Plant Indian Hawthorn in full sun to partial shade conditions. It prefers a consistently moist but well-drained landscape bed. To help ensure adequate drainage, plant the crown 1 or 2 inches above the soil level for the best landscape performance.

While most Indian Hawthorns are small landscape shrubs in the 3-foot range, there is a bigger selection I’m really excited about. Rosalinda Indian Hawthorn is promoted through the Southern Living Plant Collection. It is a large plant that can grow up to about 15 feet if left unpruned.

Selections I have seen have been trained as tree forms, and the bright pink flowers are a welcome sight in the late spring and early summer. Rosalinda is a little more sensitive to cold winter temperatures. It is hardy in zones 8 through 10, so this is better suited to the lower half of Mississippi.



Source: COMPILED BY - FCNews Staff Reporter & COMPOSITION EDITOR - Dr. Gary R. Bachman, MSU Horticulturist - Coastal Research & Extension Center




[EDITOR’S NOTE: Dr. Gary Bachman is an associate Extension Research Professor of Horticulture at the Coastal Research and Extension Center in Biloxi. Locate Southern Gardening columns and television and radio programs on the Internet at http://msucares.com/news/.]

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