Sunday, October 30, 2011

Plant of the Day: Viburnum carlesii


I'm studying for a Certified Professional Horticulture test that is coming up in March. Part of the test is memorizing a list of plants commonly used in the landscape. I figured that a great way to study these plants would be to write about them right here! Hope you enjoy the plant picks and find the information useful. The first plant, chosen by my amazing assistant/partner, is Viburnum carlessii.

Latin Name: Viburnum carlesii
Family: Adoxaceae
Common Name: Koreanspice Viburnum
10-Year Height: <10' (Usually reaches a maximum height of 8' and width of 8')
Bloom Time: April/May
Bloom Color: Pink (Pink may fade into white as flowers get older)
Best Exposure: Full Sun to Part Shade
Deciduous Shrub

1. The leaves are opposite, simple, ovate, and irregularly dentate. They will be dull green on the top part of the leaf while much paler on the bottom. Both sides are pubescent.


2. Hemispherical to spherical clusters of pink to white with pink tinged flowers. The flowers are fragrant at initial bloom.


Viburnum carlesii can handle a wide variety of soil and pH conditions but does best with partial sun, well-drained, slightly acidic soils. It's fragrant flowers make it an excellent candidate for borders of highly used areas of the garden. It has attractive silvery foliage and inconspicuous berry like drupes when flowering is done.



No comments:

Post a Comment