Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Illicium parviflorum is a small tree. No personal experience but it’s not something I have seen used around here much. I have a bunch of Ilex glabra. Just be aware that it’s dioecious and males can be hard to come by. I finally found one last week at Hill House Nursery
Thanks. The illicium I’m looking at is a small shrub. For the inkberry, does it matter if you don’t have a male shrub?
I have a bananappeal anise in a container out front - it is a cute small shrub. I love the color and it does fine in a mostly shady spot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Illicium parviflorum is a small tree. No personal experience but it’s not something I have seen used around here much. I have a bunch of Ilex glabra. Just be aware that it’s dioecious and males can be hard to come by. I finally found one last week at Hill House Nursery
Thanks. The illicium I’m looking at is a small shrub. For the inkberry, does it matter if you don’t have a male shrub?
Anonymous wrote:Illicium parviflorum is a small tree. No personal experience but it’s not something I have seen used around here much. I have a bunch of Ilex glabra. Just be aware that it’s dioecious and males can be hard to come by. I finally found one last week at Hill House Nursery
Anonymous wrote:Trying to figure out evergreen shrubs for the front side porch of a north facing house - it's a tall house, with another tall house to its side, so it really doesn't get a lot of sun where we're looking to plant. Prefer native. We put in dwarf mountain laurels in the spring, and they don't look so hot right now. Not sure if it's the soil (typical clay soil around NOVA) or if we didn't water them enough. We're deciding whether to keep/replace as needed the mountain laurels (some look healthier than others), or whether to replace them all with cherry laurels. A quick search indicates that cherry laurels do better in clay soil than mountain laurels, but the cherry laurels may need more sun? The cherry laurels look like they will fill out at a faster rate than the mountain laurels which is certainly appealing, but ultimately I just want something that will thrive there.
TLDR: Anyone have experience with dwarf mountain laurel shrubs and/or dwarf cherry laurel shrubs in mostly shade with clay soil?
Anonymous wrote:Trying to figure out evergreen shrubs for the front side porch of a north facing house - it's a tall house, with another tall house to its side, so it really doesn't get a lot of sun where we're looking to plant. Prefer native. We put in dwarf mountain laurels in the spring, and they don't look so hot right now. Not sure if it's the soil (typical clay soil around NOVA) or if we didn't water them enough. We're deciding whether to keep/replace as needed the mountain laurels (some look healthier than others), or whether to replace them all with cherry laurels. A quick search indicates that cherry laurels do better in clay soil than mountain laurels, but the cherry laurels may need more sun? The cherry laurels look like they will fill out at a faster rate than the mountain laurels which is certainly appealing, but ultimately I just want something that will thrive there.
TLDR: Anyone have experience with dwarf mountain laurel shrubs and/or dwarf cherry laurel shrubs in mostly shade with clay soil?