Shrubs Ideas, Tips & Guides

Growers Guide for Cassia Shrub - backyardgardener.com - Usa - Greece - Brazil
backyardgardener.com
16.02.2024

Growers Guide for Cassia Shrub

Mostly evergreen shrubs, chiefly from tropical America, belonging to the Pea family, Leguminosae. They grow from 6-50 ft. in height, have pinnate, dark green, glossy leaves, and bear golden-yellow flowers in terminal clusters in summer. Cassia is from the original Greek name Kasia.

An All-Year Plan for Fragrance in Southwestern Gardens - finegardening.com - South Africa - North Korea - state Oklahoma
finegardening.com
16.02.2024

An All-Year Plan for Fragrance in Southwestern Gardens

I grew up in the north, where my mother’s garden teemed with the intoxicating aromas of lilacs, sweet peas, and lily of the valley. When I moved to Oklahoma, I left these fragrant favorites behind and began the search for new plants to delight the senses. After trying southern classics like gardenia (Gardenia spp. and cvs., Zones 8–11) and summersweet (Clethera spp. and cvs., Zones 3–9) which don’t much care for the Oklahoma heat, I landed on several plants that fair well across many climates.

Greater Des Moines Botanical Garden - gardengatemagazine.com - Scotland - Norway - state Texas - state Iowa - county Garden
gardengatemagazine.com
16.02.2024

Greater Des Moines Botanical Garden

Greater Des Moines Botanical Garden Don't miss out on the Greater Des Moines Botanical Garden's colorful borders, beautiful roses, out-of-the-ordinary conifers and so much more! The Greater Des Moines Botanical Garden Des Moines, Iowa

Best Small Battery-Powered Garden Tools - gardengatemagazine.com
gardengatemagazine.com
16.02.2024

Best Small Battery-Powered Garden Tools

Best Small Battery-Powered Garden Tools Try one of these small battery-powered garden tools to finish garden tasks in a flash! Small battery-powered tools for the garden

How to Create a Black Magic Garden - balconygardenweb.com
balconygardenweb.com
15.02.2024

How to Create a Black Magic Garden

Having a Black Magic Garden doesn’t necessarily mean that you must go all in with horror vibes! It can be a mix of dark and light tones that exude mysterious vibes.

Growers Guide for Deutzia – Plant Information - backyardgardener.com - China - Japan - city New York - state Oregon
backyardgardener.com
14.02.2024

Growers Guide for Deutzia – Plant Information

(Deut’zia). A group of leaf-losing shrubs that are beautiful in bloom but are otherwise undistinguished. The flowers are produced from the side buds of the previous year’s growth. Many kinds are known, chiefly natives of China, Japan and the Himalayas. The majority are not perfectly hardy in the North against winter cold and should be given sheltered positions even in the climate of New York City and its environs. The Deutzias are closely related to the Mock Orange, or Philadelphus; they belong to the Saxifrage family, Saxifragaceae. The name Deutzia was given in honor of John van der Deutz, a patron of botany and at one time Sheriff of Amsterdam.

Growers Guide for Heathers, Erica and Callunas shrubs - backyardgardener.com - city New York
backyardgardener.com
14.02.2024

Growers Guide for Heathers, Erica and Callunas shrubs

Small, hardy, evergreen shrubs which grow wild in many parts of Europe and in a few localities in North America. They belong to the Heath family, Ericaceae. The name is derived from kallunein, to sweep. Branches are used as brooms. Only one species. is known, Callunas vulgaris, the common Heather or Scotch Heather, but it has many varieties which differ widely in stature, the color of flowers and color of leaves.

Growers Guide for Aucuba Japonica - backyardgardener.com - China - Japan - city New York
backyardgardener.com
14.02.2024

Growers Guide for Aucuba Japonica

Evergreen shrubs, 5-6 ft. high, with large, glossy, laurel-like green or variegated leaves and clusters of red fruits, each containing a single seed. The flowers are small and not showy, and male and female flowers are borne on different plants. They grow wild in Japan, China, and the Himalayas, and belong to the Dogwood family, Cornaceae. The word Aucuba is derived from the Japanese name of the shrub, aokiba. Aucubas will live outdoors in very sheltered locations near New York City but are generally hardy only where milder winters are the rule.

30 Best British Trees and Shrubs and How to Identify Them - gardenersworld.com - Britain - Ireland
gardenersworld.com
14.02.2024

30 Best British Trees and Shrubs and How to Identify Them

Britain and Ireland have between 32 and 35 native tree species. Numbers differ depending on how many individual species of elms and whitebeam are included, whether hybrids are listed, and which species are counted as trees and which as shrubs.

11 Bushes with Purple Flowers in Arizona - balconygardenweb.com - state Arizona
balconygardenweb.com
13.02.2024

11 Bushes with Purple Flowers in Arizona

Arizona’s landscape ranges from deserts to tall mountains and is home to several bushes that thrive in these unique climatic conditions that range from USDA Zones 5-10.

17 Best Boxwoods for Containers - balconygardenweb.com
balconygardenweb.com
13.02.2024

17 Best Boxwoods for Containers

These Boxwoods for Containers can be pruned to to be manageable and look lush all year round. You can also pair a few of them together to create a privacy screen.

How to Grow and Care for Sea Buckthorn - gardenerspath.com
gardenerspath.com
10.02.2024

How to Grow and Care for Sea Buckthorn

How to Grow and Care for Sea Buckthorn Hippophae rhamnoides

How to Grow and Care for Serviceberries - gardenerspath.com
gardenerspath.com
09.02.2024

How to Grow and Care for Serviceberries

How to Grow and Care for Serviceberries Amelanchier spp.

Growing Guidance for Paeonias - backyardgardener.com - Greece
backyardgardener.com
09.02.2024

Growing Guidance for Paeonias

Commemorating Paeon, an ancient Greek physician, is said to have first used P. officinalis medicinally. Although the genus has long been considered a member of the buttercup family, Ranunculaceae, some modern botanists now place it in a family of its own, Paeoniaceae. A genus of 33 species of hardy herbaceous and shrubby perennials and a few shrubs, among the noblest and most decorative plants for a sunny or shaded border. The main division of the genus is between the herbaceous and the tree paeony, but botanically, the matter is much more complex.

Mulching – Protect plants from the hot weather - backyardgardener.com
backyardgardener.com
09.02.2024

Mulching – Protect plants from the hot weather

An even temperature around the roots and a steady supply of moisture in the soil are all important to growing plants. A mulch, applied in early summer after hot weather begins, tends to maintain these conditions as well as to control harmful weeds.

Growing Guidance for Salvia Plant - backyardgardener.com
backyardgardener.com
09.02.2024

Growing Guidance for Salvia Plant

From the Latin salveo, meaning save or heal, used by Pliny with reference to the medicinal qualities of some species (Labiatae). A large genus of over 700 species of hardy, half-hardy and tender annual, biennial, perennial plants and shrubs, some with aromatic leaves, widely distributed in the temperate and warmer zones. It includes the common sage, S. officinalis, a valuable culinary plant, as well as many colourful summer and autumn flowering border plants.

What to Do in The Garden in February? - Fantastic Gardeners UK - blog.fantasticgardeners.co.uk - Britain - county Garden
blog.fantasticgardeners.co.uk
09.02.2024

What to Do in The Garden in February? - Fantastic Gardeners UK

February marks the transition from winter to spring. Although the chill may persist, promising signs of the upcoming new season are scattered throughout. Bulbs cautiously break through the soil, and daylight gradually begins to appear.

How to grow cotoneaster, the glorious winter berries | House & Garden - houseandgarden.co.uk - Britain
houseandgarden.co.uk
09.02.2024

How to grow cotoneaster, the glorious winter berries | House & Garden

Cotoneasters are not a well-known group of plants, and these excellent berrying shrubs are often unfairly labelled dull. The culprit responsible for this reputation is Cotoneaster horizontalis (wall spray), which sprawls across front gardens and car parks up and down the country, and is, admittedly, rather dull. But, beyond the ubiquitous blandness of C. horizontalis, there are many wonderful cotoneasters that deserve to be more widely grown.

In a Vase on Monday: Sticks of Pink - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
29.01.2024

In a Vase on Monday: Sticks of Pink

Inspired by the lovely pink pussies of Salix gracilistyla ‘Mount Aso’ featured in my last Six on Saturday and a sudden glut of blooms on Viburnum bodnantense ‘Dawn’, creating today’s vase began easily. Selecting stems of the former that wouldn’t detract from the shrub and reaching flowering stems of the latter proved a little challenging, but it was easy enough to choose additional material to complete the contents, with witch hazel H vernalis ‘Amethyst’ and foliage of Pittosporum ‘Tom Thumb’ providing different degrees of pinkness.

10 beautiful garden ideas for different parts of the garden - themiddlesizedgarden.co.uk
themiddlesizedgarden.co.uk
26.01.2024

10 beautiful garden ideas for different parts of the garden

Are you looking for garden ideas for a difficult part of your garden?

Shopping for gardeners: Containers - theenglishgarden.co.uk
theenglishgarden.co.uk
25.01.2024

Shopping for gardeners: Containers

Clipped all-green shrubs look chic, but for seasonal cheer fill them with pastel shades: think primroses, pulmonaria and wallflowers, and even potted supermarket bulbs such as hyacinths and narcissi.

Excuse Me—Do You Have a Tree for Me? | Letter from the Editor - finegardening.com
finegardening.com
25.01.2024

Excuse Me—Do You Have a Tree for Me? | Letter from the Editor

If you’re a gardener—and since you picked up this magazine I’m guessing you are—you probably get peppered with plant questions all the time. I know I do. Take Thanksgiving just this past year. My dad was looking for some trees that would “subtly block” his neighbors who had recently put a pool in their backyard. So in between doling out mashed potatoes and deciding if I wanted apple or pumpkin pie for dessert, I pulled out Dirr’s Hardy Trees and Shrubs from the nearby bookshelf to spark some suggestions. (That illustrated encyclopedia was a Christmas gift a few years back to help my dad make plant choices without my help. Its successfulness in doing so is still up for debate.) This same scenario takes place at summer picnics, children’s birthday parties, or even on planes when my seatmate asks what I do for a living. After I answer, it’s common to hear, “Wow, that’s so interesting. Listen, I have this spot where I need something …” Most of these inquiries center around trees too—and I get it. A tree is an investment with a capital “I.” Not only is a tree the single most expensive plant you will likely purchase for your landscape, but it is also the longest lived. Trees don’t like to be moved, they generally require a bit more effort to get established than a perennial or shrub, and they are usually the focal point of a specific area. For all of these reasons, everyone wants to choose the right tree.

The Best Dwarf Evergreens for Winter Containers - finegardening.com
finegardening.com
25.01.2024

The Best Dwarf Evergreens for Winter Containers

No garden is complete without at least a few containers for seasonal color. I always specify locations for planters when I create a new landscape design, with the intention of keeping them filled in every season. Although many gardeners keep their containers filled with annuals in summer and cut greenery in winter, there is another option. Planting a dwarf evergreen that can remain in its pot for several seasons will provide structure and texture every month of the year.

How to Attract Birds to Your Garden - finegardening.com - Usa
finegardening.com
25.01.2024

How to Attract Birds to Your Garden

Flittering, twittering, and singing—birds bring so much life to a garden. Apart from their beauty and pleasant songs, they also add to the biodiversity of our landscapes by spreading seeds and eating insect pests. How can we encourage birds to not only visit our yards but to nest there? Here’s a hint: it goes beyond hanging up a bird feeder. You must provide sustenance and shelter for birds to truly thrive in your garden. Here are some tips to attract them and make them want to stay.

Three Amazing Understory Trees and Shrubs - finegardening.com
finegardening.com
25.01.2024

Three Amazing Understory Trees and Shrubs

While many of us think of trees as super-tall giants or stand-alone specimen plants, we also know that most trees naturally grow in forests and that forests aren’t all made up only of tall trees. There are trees that mature at different levels, and certain trees prefer growing in the dappled light of their taller neighbors. We call these understory trees, and there are many that work well in our home gardens, adding interesting forms and structures, colorful blooms, or intriguing foliage. They also can provide food and shelter for wildlife. The following trees and shrubs all take full sun to partial shade. So if you’ve got some dappled shade under a tall canopy of trees, consider one of these excellent options.

With Winter Pruning on the Mind, Avoid Cutting on These Woody Plants - finegardening.com
finegardening.com
24.01.2024

With Winter Pruning on the Mind, Avoid Cutting on These Woody Plants

Winter is, broadly speaking, the ideal time to prune most trees and shrubs.

Deterring rabbits from your garden and protecting vulnerable plants - theenglishgarden.co.uk
theenglishgarden.co.uk
23.01.2024

Deterring rabbits from your garden and protecting vulnerable plants

Little is more discouraging than discovering healthy and recently-planted spring borders and developing vegetable crops damaged or eaten by rabbits; it’s enough to bring the Elmer Fudd out in the mildest of gardeners. Annoyingly rabbits are most active feeders early in morning and at dusk, and so often hard to spot; they also seem attracted to newly-planted areas. But by employing a range of tactics it is possible to reduce problems. 

If You See This on Your Plants and Trees, Remove Immediately - balconygardenweb.com
balconygardenweb.com
23.01.2024

If You See This on Your Plants and Trees, Remove Immediately

Bagworms are caterpillars that make homes using twigs and silk. If you see bags hanging from your plants, they might be bagworms, causing harm by eating leaves and adding weight to branches. You can remove them manually, use insecticides with Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), or invite birds and wasps to control them. If the problem persists, consult a pest control professional.

15 of the Best Smelling and Fragrant flowers - backyardgardener.com
backyardgardener.com
22.01.2024

15 of the Best Smelling and Fragrant flowers

Fragrance in flowers is such a desirable attribute that it’s a perennial complaint of many gardeners that modern varieties of various plants, particularly roses, lack all or most of the fragrance of the older varieties. This is demonstrably untrue of many varieties, of course, yet there is a good deal of truth in the generalization. Some varieties are certainly much less fragrant than the ‘old-fashioned’ roses and a few seem to lack detectable fragrance, but, on the whole, a good modern variety will number fragrance among its qualities. Much depends, of course, upon the individual sense of smell, coupled with the ‘scent memory’ which all of us possess to some degree. It is, in fact, usually well developed and most of us are readily and instantaneously reminded by present scents of past incidents, places, and persons, and although the actual vocabulary of scent is limited, it is usually possible for us to describe a scent fairly accurately by comparing it with another. Thus it is quite usual for us to say that a flower has a lily-like fragrance, or that it smells like new-mown hay.

Growing Guide for Helianthemum - backyardgardener.com - Greece
backyardgardener.com
22.01.2024

Growing Guide for Helianthemum

From the Greek helios, the sun, and anthemon. a flower (Cistaceae). Sun Rose. A genus of evergreen and semi-evergreen shrubs, sub-shrubs, perennial plants and annuals, very free flowering. Numerous named varieties and hybrids are grown and four species are native plants.

Yellow Leaves on Plants - gardenersworld.com
gardenersworld.com
22.01.2024

Yellow Leaves on Plants

The appearance of a plant gives lots of clues as to its health and well-being. Yellow leaves may be an indication of a problem and are best investigated to find out the cause, ideally at an early stage before any problem becomes too advanced. The horticultural term for yellowing leaves is chlorosis.

Adding Color to your garden - backyardgardener.com
backyardgardener.com
21.01.2024

Adding Color to your garden

The colors chosen in the planning of a garden are very much a matter of personal taste but there are particularly pleasing combinations.

Growing Guide for Hepatica - backyardgardener.com - Usa
backyardgardener.com
21.01.2024

Growing Guide for Hepatica

Today I went out my back door and noticed that one of my rosebushes was, unexpectedly, sporting a fresh new flower bud.  It was within a day or so of opening up–small, greenish and obviously defiant of the season.  The bud was an oddity on a rosebush that is itself an oddity.  When I bought the small white-flowered shrub last summer it had one blossom that was half white and half red, and looked as if it had been half-dipped in red paint.  Though my February bud was not a “half and half” flower, I took its appearance as a harbinger of spring, plucked it, and delivered it to a friend who shares my belief in such things.

Mountain Laurel - backyardgardener.com - Georgia
backyardgardener.com
21.01.2024

Mountain Laurel

Perhaps the most popular native shrub in the whole encyclopedia is Mountain Laurel. The eastern mountains from New England to Georgia are full of it, but nobody finds it tiresome. Its evergreen foliage is an asset, but what sweeps the public off their feet is the brilliant show of bloom in June. It is altogether irresistible.

Gardening: Is it too cold to move my butterfly bush? - irishtimes.com
irishtimes.com
20.01.2024

Gardening: Is it too cold to move my butterfly bush?

Q: I want to transplant a “dwarf” buddleia – which is much bigger than I expected – from a built-up flower bed to the ground. Is it too late/cold to do this? Should I cut back all the stems before I move it? It only finished flowering mid-November. Grainne Ward, Co Kildare

Popular Topics

The "Shrubs" section on diygarden.cc is your go-to resource for everything related to these versatile and captivating woody plants. Explore a world of shrubs with our comprehensive guides, tips, and inspiration to enhance your garden and landscape.

Shrubs are a type of woody plant characterized by multiple stems and a relatively low height, typically below 20 feet (6 meters). They are larger than herbs but smaller than trees. Shrubs are an important component of gardens, landscapes, and natural ecosystems due to their aesthetic appeal, functionality, and ecological value.

They come in various shapes, sizes, and forms, ranging from compact and bushy to more open and sprawling. They can be deciduous, meaning they shed their leaves seasonally, or evergreen, retaining their foliage year-round.

Some shrubs produce vibrant flowers, while others are valued for their foliage, fruit, or bark. In landscaping, shrubs serve multiple purposes. They can be used as ornamental plants to provide structure, color, and texture to gardens, borders, or hedges.

They are often employed for privacy screening, windbreaks, or to create natural boundaries. They can also attract wildlife, such as birds and butterflies, and contribute to the overall biodiversity of an area. Shrubs are relatively low-maintenance plants and can adapt to a wide range of climates and soil conditions.

They can be propagated through various methods, including seeds, cuttings, or grafting, making them accessible to both amateur and professional gardeners. Popular examples of shrubs include roses, azaleas, hydrangeas, boxwoods, lilacs, and forsythias, among many others. These plants offer a diverse array of colors, fragrances, and seasonal interest, making them versatile and highly valued in gardens and landscapes.

Whether you're seeking to add beauty, functionality, or ecological value to your garden, the "Shrubs" section on diygarden.cc is your ultimate resource.

Our site greengrove.cc offers you to spend great time reading Shrubs latest Tips & Guides. Enjoy scrolling Shrubs Tips & Guides to learn more. Stay tuned following daily updates of Shrubs hacks and apply them in your real life. Be sure, you won’t regret entering the site once, because here you will find a lot of useful Shrubs stuff that will help you a lot in your daily life! Check it out yourself!

Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.
DMCA