Plant Name: Arbutus unedo ‘compacta’
Common Name: Dwarf Strawberry Tree
Plant type: Evergreen Shrub
Height: 6-8 ft
Spread/Width: 5-6 ft
Bloom Time: Repeating Fall to late winter
Flower Color: White, bell-shaped
Exposure: Part to Full sun
Soil Requirements: Lean, well-drained soil
Water Needs: Low – Drought tolerant once established
Attributes: Masses of white flowers, Dark glossy green foliage, Cinnamon-colored bark, Edible strawberry-like fruit, , Dwarf plant, Bird friendly
Note: Low maintenance
Uses: Firewise plantings, Waterwise plantings, Privacy Screen, Specimen focal point, Wildlife gardens, Year-round interest, Informal hedge, Butterfly gardens, Attracts Hummingbirds, Winter interest
Native to: Southern Europe and Ireland
USDA Hardiness Zone: 7-9
Tag Archives: Winter Flowers
Horticulture Report: Edgeworthia chrysantha
Plant Name: Edgeworthia chrysantha
Cultivar: Akebono
Common Name: Paperbush
Plant type: Deciduous Shrub
Height: 5’ – 6’
Bloom Time: February – March
Flower Color: Red/Orange
Exposure: Part Shade or Shade
Soil Requirements: Moisture-retentive, Fertile Loamy Soil
Water Needs: Medium
Attributes: Winter Interest, Tubular Fragrant Flowers borne on bare stems,
Silky Silver Buds
Note: Related to Daphnes, Inner bark used in China to make quality papers. Winter hardy to below 0 degrees F.
Uses: Woodland gardens, Shady borders, Collector’s Specimen Planting, Ornamental, Used to make paper.
USDA Zone: 7b -10b
Other Varieties:
*Edgeworthia chrysantha Snow Cream Papberbush – Winter hardy USDA Zones 7b-10b
*Edgeworthia papyrifera Nanjing Gold Paperbush – USDA Zones 8-10
Horticulture Report: Winter Flowers
Erica carnea…..Winter Heath
A dwarf evergreen shrub native to the European Alps which persist even under the snow. It often blooms at Christmas (“Winter Beauty”). Flowers are borne individually on the stem in masses of bell-shaped blossoms. Colors range from creamy white, rich pink, to deep ruby red (“ Ruby Glow”). Plant in well drained humus-rich soil. It needs partial shade in hotter areas. Prune yearly to prevent “legginess”.
Height 12-18”, spreading to 3 feet, so give it room. USDA Hardiness Zone: 2 to 10
“They are adorable, these clumps of winter heather. Actually they seem to welcome the snow, for it enhances their sweet complexions.” Beverley Nichols, Down the Garden Path
Diane Witch Hazel
Winter Flowers
Narcissus papyraceus, one of a few species known as “Paperwhites,” is a perennial bulbous plant native to the Mediterranean region (USDA zones 9-10). Paperwhites produce white flowers in bunches which are strongly fragrant and they are easy to force to bloom indoors for winter flowers.
Paperwhites only need three inches of room for their roots to grow, so shallow containers like glass vases and ceramic bowls are ideal containers. It’s fun to scout around antique stores, second hand stores and garage sales for unusual planting containers to display these fragrant flowers indoors. They make wonderful gifts, too.
The planting medium only needs to provide support for the plants and be suitable for the roots to grow through. And because Paperwhites are usually discarded after flowering the planting medium doesn’t need to supply any nutrients, so Paperwhites can be planted in soil, pebbles, tumbled beach glass, glass marbles or small gravel.
Plant Paperwhites bulbs with the top inch above the soil/pebble “soil” line. For a full display plant bulbs close together, almost touching. If planted in soil add just enough water to moisten the soil. If planted in pebbles, rocks or marbles, add enough water to just cover the bulbs bases. The goal here is to have the very bottom of the bulbs touching the water to encourage root growth, but not covering the entire bulb which can cause it to rot. Place the container in a sunny bright location and in a week or two roots will appear, after which the buds and blooms develop quickly. It is fun to watch the daily progress.
My friend gave me this large basket she was taking to Goodwill, so I lined it with a plastic trash bag, filled it with potting soil and planted 20 Paperwhites in it the first week of December.
Carlotta Lucas
Mid-Winter Madness
The English writer Beverley Nichols wrote in his book Down the Garden Path, “We are in the depths of winter….my first winter at the cottage…and the first winter when I went mad.” Isn’t this the feeling all gardeners have in the middle of winter when snow blankets our landscape and we stare out our windows into our gardens dreaming of vibrant multicolored flowers overflowing in our flower beds, the sweet scent of flowers filling our noses, and the sun warming our backs, as we weed.
Mr. Nichols poetically expresses a gardener’s dilemma in winter time when he writes, “ The average gardener, in the cold dark days of December and January, sits by his fire, turning over the pages of seed catalogs, wondering what he should sow for the spring.”
Does this sound familiar?
He continues writing, “If he goes out into his garden at all, it is only for the sake of exercise. He puts on a coat, stamps up and down the frozen path, hardly deigns to glance at the black empty beds, turns in again”. He says after his first winter, when he went mad, he declared he would have flowers in the winter time, real flowers, to get him through the dark cold days of winter.His friends, and neighbors, told him this desire for winter flowers was insane, he stated, “perhaps it was”, but flowers he would have.
The following are a few of the winter flowers he grew to get him through until spring.
Winter Flowers
Helleborus niger……. Christmas rose
The Christmas rose is a traditional cottage garden favorite. It bears its pure white flowers (which fades to pink) in the depths of winter. They should be planted in partial shade, preferably under deciduous trees, which gives them winter sunlight. Plant in fertile, well-draining moist soil and protect them from strong winter winds. Height 8” USDA Hardiness Zones 3 to 8
Galanthus nivalis……Common Snowdrops
The common snowdrop looks like three drops of milk hanging from a stem. It is a bulbous plant in the Amaryllis family. Most flower in winter, before the vernal equinox (March 21st in the N. Hemisphere), but certain species flower in early spring and late autumn. Some snowdrop species are threatened in their wild habitats, and in most countries it is now illegal to collect bulbs from the wild. Good for mass plantings.
Height: less than 6″ USDA Hardiness Zones 3 to 8
Galanthus elwesii…Giant Snowdrop
Giant clear white fragrant flowers with predominant green inner segments Blooms 6 weeks earlier than the common snowdrop. Woodland plant. Performs best in the shade and in rich well-drained soil. Height: 12” USDA Hardiness Zones 3 to 8
Jasminum nudiflorum…..Winter Jasmine
Winter Jasmine is known to be one of the earliest blooming plants in the landscape. The 1″-wide yellow blooms open in January to March prior to the leaves but, unlike most jasmines, are not fragrant. The trailing branches root where they contact bare soil. Fill in areas if you like or support with a trellis. Plant in full sun to partial sun, in well-drained soils. Height 15’ USDA Hardiness Zones 6 to 10
Hamamelis mollis……Chinese Witch hazel
This ornamental deciduous shrub is known for its strongly scented flowers. It flowers in late January or early February and produces spider-like flowers which are long lasting. Plant in full sun to partial shade in moist fertile acidic soils. Height 10-12 feet (slow growing) USDA Hardiness Zones 5 to 8
Lonopsidium acaule…False diamond flower (aka: violet cress)
Violet cress is a low growing annual plant with tiny pale lilac flowers appearing in early spring smelling like honey. It is Ideal for rock walls and edging plants. They need partial to deep shade with moist well-drained soil. Violet cress has naturalized in California through self-seeding, but they are not native to the U.S.; the USDA considers it an escaped weed!
Height 3-4” USDA Hardiness Zone: 3 to 9
Winter aconite i s a member of the butter-cup family. All parts of this plant are poisonous, although its acrid taste m akes poisoning a low risk. Winter aconite blooms in late January or early February and blankets the ground with small, sunny, yellow blooms. Plant in well drained hum us-rich soil. This plant dies down completely after spring. It’s a good companion with snowdrops. Self seeds.
Height 8” USDA Hardiness Zone: 4 to 9
Eranthis – “A butter cup field in January. That is what the aconite will do for you…”, Beverley Nichols, Down the Garden Path.
Chimonanthus fragans……Wintersweet
Hard to find old-fashioned deciduous shrub, but worth the search. The buds form in the fall and grow larger with each warm winter’s day. It can take three to five years to reach bloom stage, but it’s attractive in all seasons with tapered leaves on arching branches, which turn clear yellow in the fall. Easy to grow. Plant in sun or part shade and where you can walk by and enjoy its perfume.
Height 8-10’ USDA Hardiness Zone: 7 to 9
“If they (Wintersweet) are cut in bud, they lasted (in a vase), with the discreet assistance of a tablet of aspirin,…. nearly a month. Their perfume was as sweet and delicate as anything you could desire.” Beverley Nichols, Down the Garden Path.
Crocus imperati…..Early crocus
Lilac flowers with outside of outer petals buff, marked with dark purple. A reliable bloomer. Blooms in December or January. Plant in well drained soil, in the sun. Height 6” USDA Hardiness zone: 3 to 8
Crocus sieberis…….Snow crocus
A small, very early spring blooming, crocus which naturalizes easily and is ideal for rock gardens, under trees and shrubs, borders, and large drifts. Colors vary from white, blue, mauve, purple, having areas of white, yellow, or orange in the throat. Plant in well drained soil.
Height 3-4” USDA Hardiness Zone: 3 to 8
Corylopsis Spicata……Spike Winterhazel
Deciduous shrub with open, bushy, upright, spreading, picturesque branches. Flowers are clear yellow in 1 to 2″ drooping clusters blooms in later winter and early spring. Fragrant. New leaf growth is dark purple and matures to deep blue-green. Plant in sun to partial shade. Do not over water. Height 6-8’ USDA Hardiness Zone: 6 to 8
Daphne meszerum – February Daphne
February Daphne is a deciduous to semi-evergreen shrub. Vibrant lilac-purple, neon pink or white flowers bloom on naked twigs in February and have a deliciously potent fragrance . It has thin soft green leaves in the summer followed by brilliant scarlet berries in September. Unlike other Daphnes, D. meszerum likes more sun and summer irrigation. Plant in well drained porous soil. Height 3-4’ USDA Hardiness Zone:5 to 8
“…learn this by heart: “The Daphne mezereum loves it roots in the shade and its head in the sun….” Beverley Nichols, Down the Garden Path
Daphne odora- Winter Daphne
Winter Daphne is a handsome evergreen plant with powerful fragrant flowers. Pink to deep red flowers displayed in nosegay-clusters at the end of its branches. Blooms from February through April. Daphne odora needs air around its roots so plant in humus-rich semi-porous soil. Prefers mid-afternoon shade. Height: 4’ USDA Hardiness Zone: 4 to 10, 12, 14-24
Lonicera fragrantissima …..Winter Honeysuckle
Winter Honeysuckle is a deciduous shrub, in the nor thern states. Its creamy-white flowers are borne on naked twigs in February and produce a sweet lemony fragrance. Budded branches will bloom in doors for winter bouquets. Height 8-10’ USDA Hardiness Zone: 5 to 9
Please note: The U.S. Forrest Service listed Lonicera fragrantissima as a persistent invasive threat to native habitats, especially in the southern states region.
Sternbergia lutea…Winter Daffodil (aka: Fall daffodil)
Winter daffodils have vibrant yellow, crocus-like blooms. They require a sunny location with well-drained, humus-rich soil and wind protection. The bulb can develop bulb rot if planted in too moist of an area. It produces crocus-like leaves after flowering, which lasts through the winter. These bulbs are touted as hardy bulbs but they are native to warmer winter regions so they are really semi-hardy because they can be injured at temperatures below 28°F. Need winter protection: plant in pots then move indoors, or into a greenhouse, for the winter. Note: Do not plant in the drip line of trees. Height 6-10” USDA Hardiness Zone:5 to 9
Sternbergia lutea – “…though its petals may be frozen with impunity, and though it will stand any amount of wind…it hates being dribbled upon.” Beverley Nichols, Down the Garden Path
Petasites fragrans….Winter Heliotrope
Winter heliotrope has lilac to pink flowers that smells like vanilla. It’s a garden-escaped wildflower due to seed propagation, difficult to control spreading. It flowers November through to February. Grows in warm climates. Height 6-8” USDA Hardiness Zone: 9 to 10
This little beardless dwarf iris is sometimes called the Algerian iris. It’s lavender-blue flowers has a lemony-vanilla aroma. Planting them against a sunny wall will lessen their exposure to winter cold and encourage early blooming. Plant in well drained soil and do not water in the summer when dormant. Height 6-9” USDA Hardiness Zone: 4 to 9
*Another late-winter Iris: Iris reticulate: Blooms in mid-February in shades of blue & purple. Height 3”-6”
Forsythia intermedia…..Forsythia
A deciduous shrub with upright spreading branches. Vigorous grower. Blooms in early March though April with very showy yellow blooms lasting 2 to 3 weeks. Plant in full sun to partial shade. It is very adaptable to poor soils, but prefers moist, well-drained soils. Plant in full sun. Height 8-10’ USDA Hardiness Zone: 4 to 8
Erica carnea…..Winter Heath
A dwarf evergreen shrub native to the European Alps which persist even under the snow. It often blooms at Christmas (“Winter Beauty”). Flowers are borne individually on the stem in masses of bell-shaped blossoms. Colors range from creamy white, rich pink, to deep ruby red (“ Ruby Glow”). Plant in well drained humus-rich soil. It needs partial shade in hotter areas. Spreads to 3 feet, so give it room. Prune yearly to prevent “legginess”.
Height 12-18” USDA Hardiness Zone: 2 to 10
“They are adorable, these clumps of winter heather. Actually they seem to welcome the snow, for it enhances their sweet complexions.” Beverley Nichols, Down the Garden Path
By: Carlotta Lucas