Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be sure you protect them from the deer in this area until the plants get large enough for it to not kill them.
I haven't seen any in our neighborhood but will be on the lookout. How do you protect them from deer?
Anonymous wrote:Be sure you protect them from the deer in this area until the plants get large enough for it to not kill them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love Camellias, but the blooms always end up spoiled. It’s just how they are.
It would be a great idea to visit the National Arboretum around the time you want them to bloom. They have big collections of both so you could find some good varieties.
There are also probably Viburnums that would work for you, maybe button bush? Those are natives. Not evergreen.
I got our camellias from a Camellia Forest Nursery by mail and they’ve done well. They are definitely slow growing. Make sure you get a cold hardy variety or you’ll grow them for 15 years only to lose them to a harsh winter.
Do you mean they start to look bad at the end of the blooming?
DP here, and I have the same complaint. The whole plant doesn't tend to bloom together so some look brown when they're done. It just not a satisfying look to me.
Anonymous wrote:I hate our azaleas. Bloom for like 2 weeks the boring. They look better in wooded areas, IMO
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have camelias -- note that different varieties bloom at different times -- and azaleas, but I also really like my viburnums and especially my dwarf kalmia (mountain laurel). And as long as it isn't deep shade, you should look at dwarf abelia as they smell just as heavenly as the daphne you wanted and are so maintenance free.
I just looked up the abelia, those are beautiful, but yeah it's deep shade. North facing yard that is shaded entirely by the house. Do you think the dwarf kalmia would grow there? Those are pretty too.