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Vineyard Gardens

484 State Road
West Tisbury, MA, 02575
508.693.8512
Landscaping & Garden Center

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Vineyard Gardens

  • Home
  • ABOUT
  • LANDSCAPING
    • PROJECTS
    • SPRING CHECKLIST 2026
    • Landscape Teams
    • LANDSCAPE DESIGN
    • LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTION
    • LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE
  • NURSERY
    • Nursery
    • BULK MATERIAL
    • PLANT PROFILES
  • Application
  • EVENTS
  • FIELD NOTES
  • TESTIMONIALS
  • Contact

CONTAINER PLANTING

June 3, 2026 Karen Logan

Chives illustration by karen blackerby logan

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CONTAINER

PLANTING

Time to Plant Your Pots

They are a welcoming splash of color at your entrance, on your deck or patio. Pots can vary in size and can be combinations of sizes and heights arranged together to make a dynamic display. Sometimes just one kind of plant in several pots arranged together can be simple and elegant, such as one large hosta in a shade pot next to an impatiens pot. Or an acanthus plant in an urn. An advantage of utilizing planted containers allows you to be flexible with the arrangement.

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Tips for Planting Containers

  •  In mixed containers the plants will be married together for the whole season so be sure they have similar requirements. Group full sun plants or shade plants together depending on your spot.

  • Annuals long bloom season offers a reliable consistency of color that keep your containers looking fresh through autumn. To elevate your pots and hanging baskets, try weaving in vibrant annual vines like Mina lobata (Firecracker Vine), Thunbergia (Black-Eyed Susan Vine), Cobaea scandens (Cup and Saucer Vine), or classic Mandevilla.

  • While we typically recommend annuals for containers because they offer non-stop blooms all summer long, don't rule out perennials! Many perennials boast spectacular foliage that looks stunning in pots all season, with the added bonus of a beautiful bloom window. For shady spots, Heucheras (Coral Bells) or Brunnera 'Jack Frost' offer incredible texture, and even a single, large Hosta can make a dramatic statement in a container.

  • Geraniums are an old time favorite. They are drought tolerant once established. Combine them with other drought tolerant sun lovers like Euphorbia Diamond Frost instead of the traditional vinca major.

  • Great container plants for sun include Verbenas, Calibracoa ‘Million Bells’, Petunias, Zinnias, Euphorbia Diamond Frost, Salvias, Sweet Alyssum and Sweet Potato Vine. A simple pot can just be Cosmos sonata, dwarf series. You could also try something new like Browallia americana or Cephalophora aromatica.

  • Great container plants for shade include Impatiens, Begonias, Fuschias, Four O’ Clocks, Nicotiana, Rudbeckia hirtas ‘Black eyed Susan’, Coleus, Lobelia, and Sweet Potato Vine.

  • Plant the taller plants in the center and the trailers around the outside. 

  • An easy way to insure proper fertility is to put some Osmocote fertilizer on the soil surface when you finish planting your pots and then water with the hose. Otherwise mix a few tablespoons of water soluble fertilizer into your watering can and water them with fertilizer about once a week.

  • It is still early in the season and annuals grow quickly so don’t overcrowd them.

  • Most importantly have fun designing and planting your pots and watching them grow.

    Add annuals to your perennial beds, containers & hanging baskets for color all season long!

COLOR COMBINATIONS

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When mixing annuals and

perennials, your color palette

can elevate the entire design.

Keep it simple but highly effective

with these basic rules of thumb:

Monochromatic Magic:

Layer different tones of the

same color together for an

effortless, sophisticated look.

High Contrast:

Pair deep, dark foliage with

bright white blooms for

an instant, dramatic focal point.

The Great Balancers:

Use cool blues, muted grays, and

rich greens to tone down louder,

vibrant colors like orange and red.

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HERBS

Elevate Your Containers with Fresh Herbs

Beyond traditional flowers, herbs make a spectacular and practical addition to container gardens. Now is the perfect time to plant a mix of perennial, annual, and edible herbs in your pots to create a complete sensory experience right on your patio, filling your space with incredible textures, rich aromas, and fresh flavors for summer cooking!

LEARN MORE: PERENNIAL HERBS
LEARN MORE: SALVIAS

Herb Planter

Cilantro

Chives

TIMING IS KEY IN GARDENING! DON’T WAIT TO GET STARTED!

In DEER RESISTANT, JUNE, FIELD NOTES Tags perennial herbs, culinary herbs, sage, thyme, lavender, chives, tarragon
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DEER RESISTANT PLANTS

May 26, 2026 Karen Logan

Vineyard Gardens garden bed. Amsonia hubrichtii (center with blue flowers) and Bronze Fennel, a perennial herb (in the background) are both deer resistant perennials

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Dealing with

Deer in Your Garden:

What to Know and How to Protect Your Plants

Deer can easily devastate a garden, but a little understanding of their habits can go a long way. Understanding what deer look for (and what they avoid) can help you make strategic plant choices. Deer show distinct preferences when it comes to browsing. Knowing their favorite textures can help you plan your landscape:

  • The Favorites: Deer adore plants that are soft to the touch with high water content (like Hostas), as well as tender new flower buds and evergreen shrubs like Rhododendrons.

  • The Deterrents: They generally avoid plants with coarse, bristly, fuzzy, or spiny textures, and they naturally steer clear of plants with intense aromas.

*Note: If deer are hungry enough, they will eat just about anything!

Signs of Deer Damage

Because deer lack upper incisors, they don't leave a clean cut when they browse. Instead, they leave behind rough, jagged tears on stems and foliage, a telltale sign they’ve been to your property for dinner. While browsing happens year-round, the heaviest pressure always occurs from October through February, especially during challenging winter months when wild food sources are scarce.

Black Chokeberry, a deer resistant native shrub

Forget Me Nots & Bleeding Hearts are both deer resistant plants.

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Control & Prevention

How to Deter Deer

No garden is completely deer-proof, even known "deer-resistant" varieties are highly vulnerable during their first few weeks in the ground. New plants are often lush from nursery care, making them an irresistible target. There are several highly effective techniques you can use to protect your landscape. Combining a few of these methods will yield the best results:

  • Commercial Repellents: If you struggle with heavy deer pressure, we highly recommend spraying vulnerable plants & shrubs and newly installed plants with a deer repellent for 3 to 4 weeks after planting. This breaks their browsing habit and gives the plants time to establish. Products containing a mixture of dried bovine blood, sulfured eggs, or garlic are incredibly effective because they target both a deer's sense of smell and taste. These organic sprays will not harm your plants and are available at Vineyard Gardens.

  • Strategic Plant Placement: Design your garden beds with deer behavior in mind. Place heavily scented, fuzzy leaved or poisonous plants on the outer perimeter of your gardens to act as a natural barrier, hiding the more tempting, delicate plants on the inside.

  • Choose Unpalatable Varieties: Fill your landscape with beautiful plants that deer naturally dislike. Excellent options include Lilac, Lavender, Marigolds, Zinnias, Daffodils, and Snapdragons. Stop by our nursery, and our staff can help you pick out the perfect deer-resistant combinations for your specific yard.

  • The Soap Method: For a quick home remedy, try scattering or hanging heavily scented bars of soap (like Irish Spring) around the perimeter of your garden beds. Leaving the wrappers on helps the soap endure rain and last a bit longer.

  • Install Protective Fencing: When deer pressure is severe, a physical barrier is the most reliable long-term solution. To truly keep deer from jumping into your yard, a fence must be at least 8 feet tall. While a solid 8-foot metal fence is highly effective, it can become quite expensive. As a fantastic, low-profile alternative, we sell a black vinyl deer fencing at the nursery that blends beautifully into the landscape while keeping your plants entirely safe.

Fortunately, even if a plant gets nibbled on, it will typically survive and recover beautifully as long as its root system remains healthy and undamaged.

Plastic deer fencing

Plastic deer fencing

Wooded gate & plastic deer fencing

Wooden gate & plastic deer fencing

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DEER RESISTANT ANNUALS

Lantana ‘Sunrise Rose’

Alyssum

Calendula Bon Bon mix. A dwarf Calendula. Blooms all summer in full sun or part shade.

DEER RESISTANT ANNUALS

  • Acroclinum (Paper Flower)

  • Ageratum

  • Angelonia: Dwarf Serena, tall Angelonias and our favorite tall one is the Angel Face Series

  • Bachelor Buttons (Corn Flowers)

  • Bracteantha (Strawflower)

  • Brugmansia

  • Calendula (Angel's Trumpets)

  • Cleome (Spider Flowers)

  • Cosmos sulphureus: Cosmos Xanthos,Cosmos Apricotta and our new Cosmos Diablo

  • Datura (Trumpet Flower)

  • Delphinium (Larkspur)

  • Dusty Miller (Silver Ragwort)

  • Euphorbia marginatá ‘Snow on the Mountain’

  • Geraniums (Crane's Bill)

  • Geraniums (scented)

  • Gomphrena (Globe amaranth)

  • Gypsophila (Baby's Breath)

  • Heliotropium (Heliotrope)

  • Herbs (annuals): cilantro / parsley / dill / chervil / lemon grass / lavender / lemon verbena / marjoram

  • Lantana

  • Limonium (Statice) (Sea lavenders)

  • Lobularia maritima (Alyssum)

  • Papaver  (Poppies)

  • Salvias

  • Tagetes (Marigolds)

Heliotrope Fragrant Delight

Lantana

Salvia “Amistad” (annual and season extender)

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DEER RESISTANT PERENNIALS

Nepeta “Walkers Low’ catmint

Pennisetum Moudry-black fountain grass blooms in late summer

Bearded Iris

DEER RESISTANT PERENNIALS

  • Achillea (Yarrow)

  • Aconitum (Wolf's bane)

  • Agastache (Anise hyssop)

  • Allium Ornamental Onion)

  • Alpestris (Forget-Me-Nots)

  • Amsonia (Blue Stars)

  • Ariseama (Jack-in-the-Pulpit)

  • Arum (Arum Lilies)

  • Aruncus (Goatsbeard)

  • Artemesia (Mugworts)

  • Asarum (Wild Gingers)

  • Asclepias tuberosa (Butterfly Weed)

  • Aster

  • Astilbe (False Goatsbeard)

  • Baptisia (Wild Indigo)

  • Borage

  • Bronze Fennel

  • Cimicifuga (Bugbane)

  • Coreopsis verticillata ‘Zagreb’ and ‘Moonbeam’ (Whorled Tickseed)

  • Corydalis

  • Dicentra (Bleeding Heart)

  • Digitalis (Foxglove)

  • Dryopteris (Wood Ferns)

  • Echinops (Globe Thistle)

  • Epimedium (Barrenwort)

  • Euphorbia (Spurges)

  • Festuca glauca (Blue Fescue)

  • Helleborus (Hellebore)

  • Herbs (perennial): Rosemary / thyme / sage / tarragon / mints / Rue

  • Iris: Bearded, Japanese and Siberian Iris

  • Kirengeshoma (Yellow Wax Bells)

  • Lavandula (Lavender)

  • Liatris (Blazing stars)

  • Lily if the valley

  • Marrubium vulgare (Horehound)

  • Melissa officinalis (Lemon balm)

  • Mint family perennials

  • Monarda (Beebalm)

  • Narcissus (Daffodils)

  • Nepeta (Catnips)

  • Oregano Drops of Gold Jupiter (new)

  • Oregano: ornamental and edible

  • Ornamental Grasses

  • Osmunda Fern (Royal Fern)

  • Pachysandra

  • Paeonia (Peonies)

  • Papaver (Poppies)

  • Perovskia (Russian Sage)

  • Salvia

  • Stachys bizantina (Lambs Ears)

  • Teucrium (Germanders)

  • Yucca

Echinops, Globe Thistle

Dicentra Bleeding Hearts

Hellebores

Thyme Lemon Variegated

Helictotrichon Saphirsprudel

Foxglove

Amsonia hubrichtii

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DEER RESISTANT TREES & SHRUBS

Lilac

Pieris japonica

DEER RESISTANT TREES & SHRUBS

  • Abelia

  • Acer (Maple)

  • Aesculus (Horse Chestnut)

  • Amelanchier (Serviceberry)

  • Aralia (Spikenards)

  • Arctostaphylos uva-ursi (Bearberry)

  • Aronia (Chokeberry)

  • Aucuba (spotted laurel)

  • Betula (Birch)

  • Buddleja davidii (Butterfly Bush)

  • Buxus (Boxwood)

  • Callicarpa (Beautyberry)

  • Calycanthus floridus (Sweet Shrub)

  • Calycanthus virginicum (Carolina Allspice)

  • Caryopteris (Bluebeard)

  • Cercidiphyllum (Katsura)

  • Chaenomeles (Flowering Quince)

  • Chamaecyparis (False Cypress)

  • Chionanthus

  • Clerodendron trichotoma (Harlequin Glorybower)

  • Clethra (Sweet Pepperbush)

  • Cotinus (Smoke bush)

  • Cornus (Dogwood)

  • Cotoneaster (Bearberry cotoneaster)

  • Cryptomeria (sugi)

  • Daphne

  • Deutzia

  • Enkianthus

  • Forsythia

  • Fothergilla

  • Gleditsia

  • Hamamelis (Witch-hazel)

  • Hibiscus syriacus (Rose of Sharon)

  • Hypericum (St. Johns Wort)

  • Ilex opaca (American Holly)

  • Ilex verticillata (Winterberry Holly)

  • Illicium floridanum (Florida Anise)

  • Itea virginica (Virginia sweetspire)

  • Juniperus (Junipers)

  • Kerria japonica

  • Kolkwitzia (Beauty Bush)

  • Symphoricarpos (Crepe Myrtle)

  • Leucothoe fontanesiana (Fetterbush)

  • Lindera (Spicebush)

  • Liriodendron tulipifera (tuliptree)

  • Magnolia

  • Mahonia aquifolium (Oregon Grape Holly)

  • Mahonia nervosa

  • Mahonia repens

  • Metasequoia (dawn redwood)

  • Microbiota decussata (Siberian Cypress)

  • Myrica pensylvanica (Bayberry)

  • Nellia sinensis

  • Osmanthus (Devilwood)

  • Oxydendrum (sorrel tree)

  • Philadelphus  (Mock oranges)

  • Picea glauca (Alberta Spruce)

  • Pieris japonica (Andromeda)

  • Pines

  • Potentilla (Cinquefoil)

  • Prunus laurocerasus (Cherry Laurel)

  • Prunus maritima (Beach plum)

  • Prunus serrulata (Japanese Cherry)

  • Rhus (Sumac)

  • Rubus (Trailing Blackberry)

  • Salix (Willows)

  • Sambucus (Elderberry)

  • Sarcococca hookeriana (Sweetbox)

  • Skimmia

  • Spirea (Meadowsweets)

  • Symphoricarpos (Coralberry)

  • Syringa vulgaris (Lilac)

  • Viburnum dentatum (Arrowwood Viburnum)

  • Weigela

  • Wisteria

Clethra

Fothergilla

Spirea

Callicarpa

variegated Boxwood

MONROVIA: DEER RESISTANT PLANTS
DEER RESISTANT PLANTS
In DEER RESISTANT, GARDEN TIPS, MAY, FIELD NOTES Tags Deer resistant plants, Deer resistant annuals, Deer resistant perennials, Deer resistant shrubs
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PERENNIAL HERBS

April 13, 2026 Karen Logan

Lavender illustration by karen blackerby logan

PERENNIAL HERBS

Sage, Thyme, Lavender, Chives & Tarragon

Herbs are a perfect addition to your garden! They are extremely easy to grow and come back year after year. You can harvest them for your meals, drinks, medicinal purposes, aromatherapy, in addition many have gorgeous blooms! Perennial herbs tend to live longer that two years. They go dormant in the winter and return in the spring sending up new stems and leaves from the crown. Chives are usually the first to pop up in March. Most herbs in the mint family are perennial, such as rosemary, oregano, thyme, sage, lemon balm, marjoram, anise hyssop, and mint

PERENNIAL HERBS sold in 4" pots: Thyme. Sage, Mint, Tarragon, Savory, Lemon Verbena, Rosemary and Lemon Balm

mixed herb planter

Lavender Aromatico blue improved

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SAGE

Sages are celebrated by gardeners and chefs alike for both their ornamental beauty and their exceptional culinary qualities. While classic green sages are traditionally grown for the kitchen, the colorful varieties make stunning, structural additions to any perennial garden. Beyond their beauty and flavor, sages are incredibly tough, they are highly drought-tolerant, naturally deer-resistant, and hardy enough to withstand frost. To thrive, they simply require full sun and well drained soil.

  • Salvia oficinalis (Common Sage): This wonderful perennial herb is a kitchen staple, but the straight species is also highly ornamental, producing spikes of beautiful, classic blue salvia flowers in the garden.

  • Berggarten Sage: A fantastic green cultivar we love for its large, rounded, silvery-green leaves and robust growth habit.

  • Purple Sage(Salvia officinalis 'Purpurascens'): Features striking, smoky-purple new foliage that adds dramatic color contrast to your herb beds or garden borders.

  • Tricolor Sage (Salvia officinalis 'Tricolor'): A gorgeous variegated variety splashed with shades of green, white, and pinkish-purple.

  • Pineapple Sage and Golden Pineapple Sage: They grow into 5-to-6-foot plants and in late summer, they produce large, vibrant racemes of brilliant red flowers that pollinators adore. The foliage has an unmistakable pineapple fragrance. Be sure to plant these early in the season to give them plenty of time to reach their full, dramatic size before the late-summer bloom begins!

Sage ‘Berggarten’

Sage 'Purpurascens’

Sage ‘Tricolor’

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CHIVES

Chives are cool-season, cold-tolerant perennials that are best planted in early to mid-spring for an abundant early summer harvest. Beyond their value in the kitchen, chives make a wonderful companion plant in the garden, naturally deterring common pests with their aromatic foliage. For the best results, try planting them alongside carrots, celery, lettuce, peas, and tomatoes!

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THYME

Thyme is one of the hardiest, most rewarding plants you can add to your landscape. A hardy low growing evergreen herb with small, fragrant leaves and thin, woody stems. Thyme has ornamental, culinary and medicinal qualities.

  • In the Kitchen: Classic English Thyme and bright, zesty Lemon Thyme are great for your summer recipes.

  • In the Cracks & Patios: Transform your hardscaping with Creeping Thyme. Creeping Thyme is purely ornamental and comes in red, white, pink chintz and wooly. Varieties like Woolly Thyme spread 2–3 feet wide and grows beautifully over flat patio stones. Given good drainage and full sun, creeping thyme grows like ground cover.

  • For Brilliant Color: Brighten up sunny beds with variegated options like Silver Thyme or our golden collection (Archer’s Gold, Golden Lemon).

Give your thyme full sun and well-drained soil, and watch it thrive!

Wooly Thyme

Lemon Variegated Thyme

Creeping Thyme

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LAVENDER

Lavender is one of those plants we never get enough of at Vineyard Gardens. While it’s a wonderful culinary herb, it truly shines in the garden bringing soft drifts of color from early summer into fall. With its silvery-green foliage, upright flower spikes, and shrub-like form, lavender is perfect for edging paths or tucking into perennial borders. And of course, it’s just as lovely harvested for its calming fragrance.

Munstead Lavender

English Lavender

Hidcote Lavender

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MINT

Mints are vigorous perennial herbs that are a must-have for any kitchen garden. However, a word of advice for your landscape: mints are best grown in containers! They spread voraciously via underground runners and can be incredibly difficult to eliminate from a garden bed once established. In the kitchen, mint is remarkably versatile, essential for fresh summer cooking, hot or iced teas, and classic cocktails like mojitos. All mint varieties thrive best in full sun and well-drained soil.

  • Peppermint and spearmint are the two most popular mints.

    • Kentucky Colonel Spearmint: Our absolute favorite spearmint for many years! It produces large, robust leaves with a sweet, classic flavor.

    • Mojito Mint: A distinct spearmint variety with a mild scent that is perfectly tailored for muddling into cocktails.

    • Chocolate Mint: A rich variation of peppermint with darker stems and a delightful scent reminiscent of a peppermint patty.

    • Corsican Mint: This specialty mint features tiny, microscopic green leaves and stays completely low to the ground. It is perfect for planting in the cracks of stone patios or walkways where it releases a refreshing scent when stepped on. Unlike its aggressive cousins, Corsican mint is a bit more delicate and challenging to grow, requiring consistent moisture and partial shade.

    • Variegated Mints: We also carry several ornamental, multi-colored variegated mints. Because of their beautiful splashed foliage, they look spectacular when mixed with annuals in patio pots!

Mint Corsican

Mint Kentucky Colonel

Mojito Mint


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TARRAGON

Tarragon Artemesia dracunculus is a perennial culinary herb that tastes a little like anise or has licorice like flavors. It is a staple in French cuisine and is often referred to as French tarragon.

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ANNUAL HERBS

We also sell a variety of annual herbs. Now is the time to plant them! Come check out our herb house and herb garden.

ANNUAL HERBS sold in 6 packs & 2” herb pots : Cilantro, Parsley, Dill, Chervil

Chevril

Parsley curled

Cilantro

TIMING IS KEY IN GARDENING! DON’T WAIT TO GET STARTED!

APRIL GARDEN TIPS
In APRIL, DEER RESISTANT, FIELD NOTES Tags perennial herbs, culinary herbs, sage, thyme, lavender, chives, tarragon
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SERVICEBERRY

March 27, 2026 Karen Logan

Serviceberry (illuststration by karen blackerby logan)

SERVICEBERRY

(SHAD TREES)

Amelanchier ×grandiflora ‘Autumn Brilliance’

Known as Shad Trees on Martha’s Vineyard because they bloom when the Shad (a type of small fish) swim up the creeks here on the island to breed.

A native multi-stemmed shrub or small tree, about 20 feet tall, has year round interest. Serviceberries are one of the first to burst into bloom in April with their showy white flowers. Once the flowers pass, tasty purple colored fruit, similar in flavor to blueberries, follow in mid June. The fall brings showstopping brilliant orange to red autumn color.

Attract more wildlife to your garden with native berry producing shrubs like Serviceberry!

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VALUABLE SHRUB FOR WILDLIFE

Native to eastern United States and Canada, Serviceberries support numerous butterfly and bird species These early bloomers support pollinators in spring and produce sweet berries in the summer that support birds like cedar waxwings, robins, and thrushes. Once the berries ripen, they provide a rich source of nutrition and are a crucial food source for early nesting birds and returning migratory species.

Serviceberries are a valuable shrub for wildlife. One of the earliest blooming shrubs in spring, Serviceberries burst into bloom typically in April, making it an essential early spring food source for pollinators.

native berry producing shrubs

attract wildlife to your garden

supporting birds

with native plants

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GROWING & CARE

Serviceberries have an upright habit with grayish to silver, smooth bark.

  • Easy to grow

  • Tolerant of most site conditions but does not tolerate salt or poor drainage. Prefers acidic, well drained soils in partial shade to sun.

  • It is susceptible to heat and drought stress.

  • Use as a small tree in mixed borders or foundation plantings.

  • Excellent companion with Carolina allspice (Calycanthus floridus), flowering dogwood (CornusBenthamidia florida), mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia), pink-shell azalea (Rhododendron vaseyi), arrowwood (Viburnum dentatum), and whorled tickseed (Coreopsis verticillata).

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ATTRIBUTES

Attracts Wildlife: Host Plant / Other Pollinators & Wildlife / Attracts Songbirds / Attracts Bees

Tolerance: Deer & Rabbit Resistant / Urban Environment / Drought Tolerant

Additional Attributes: Edible / Low Maintenance

Landscape Use: Rain Garden / Specimen

Attractive Fall Foliage and/or Ornamental Fruit: Red to Purple Fruit / Fall Foliage

Height: 15-25 ft

Spread: 12-20 ft

Exposure: Sun / Part Shade

Soil Moisture: Average / Dry

Ornamental Interest: Spring Bloom / Summer Fruit / Fall Foliage

In APRIL, DEER RESISTANT, FLOWERING SHRUBS, NATIVE PLANTS, PLANT PROFILES, SHRUBS Tags native shrubs, host plant, deer resistant, Serviceberries, Amelanchier ×grandiflora ‘Autumn Brilliance’, Amelanchier laevis, Amelanchier canadensis
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NARCISSUS

March 16, 2026 Karen Logan

Narcissus poeticus ‘Pheasants Eye’ illustration by karen blackerby logan

NARCISSUS

(DAFFODIL)

Narcissus, commonly called Daffodils, are hardy spring flowering perennials that come back year after year. They are harbingers of spring, announcing that winter is coming to an end. The large, yellow common daffodil is one of the most ubiquitous springtime plants. There are 40 different species of Narcissus varying in size and ranging in color from white to yellow. They are a great cut flower.

“Plant daffodils, tulips, hyacinths, and crocuses together at the edge of a path or walkway. As the flowers bloom in succession, they’ll mask each other’s dying foliage.” Gardenista

Vineyard Gardens Nursery Front Garden Bed filled with Narcissus

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GROWING CONDITIONS & CARE

Narcissus are spring blooming bulbs that are best planted in September or October. They go dormant in the winter and will bloom year after year while multiplying.

  • Flowering bulbs best to plant in autumn

  • Light: Sun or some shade

  • Plant in clumps in well drained soil

  • Deer resistant!!

  • Flowers should be removed (deadheaded) as they fade.

  • After flowering, let the leaves die down naturally for at least six weeks before removal.

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NARCISSUS AVAILABLE AT VINEYARD GARDENS THIS YEAR

Our Netherland forced bulbs that we potted up in the fall are now available!

  • Narcissus Red Devon

  • Narcissus Double Flowering 'Tahiti'

  • Narcissus cyclamineus 'Jetfire'

  • Narcissus ‘Tete e tete’

  • Narcissus Trumpet 'Dutch Master'

  • Narcissus Fortune

  • Narcissus Large Cupped 'Ice Follies'

We have a lot of the Dutch master variety available!

Narcissus Trumpet 'Dutch Master'

Narcissus Large Cupped 'Ice Follies'

Narcissus cyclamineus 'Jetfire'

Narcissus Double Flowering 'Tahiti'

SUCCESSION GARDENING
MARCH GARDEN TIPS

HAPPY GARDENING!

In SPRING PLANTS, DEER RESISTANT, MARCH, PLANT PROFILES Tags Daffodils, Narcissus, spring perennials, fall planted bulbs
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HELLEBORE

March 13, 2026 Karen Logan

HELLEBORES

LENTEN ROSE

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On a walk through Coastal Maine Botanical Garden last year at the beginning of May, one of the many surprises I stumbled upon were the enormous array of Hellebores dappled throughout the shade gardens. I was mesmerized by their range of colors from deep red to shades of pink and white. In the shade of the Giles Rhododendron and Perennial Garden, swaths of Hellebores were groundcover for the Rhododendrons and Azaleas. I have always been in awe of Hellebore’s unique flower structure and evergreen foliage but witnessing it in these numbers was just glorious.

Hellebores awaken in mid April when they begin to put on a show with their abundant blooms. Their flowers last for several weeks and once the petals have faded, the sepals, which look like a flower, remain attractive for several months. The sturdy evergreen foliage is appealing well into the winter months. With all their different stages they are the plant that keeps on giving from spring to winter.

Hellebores are perfect in woodland gardens and in shady areas under deciduous trees.

Helebore at Maine Coastal Botanical Garden

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GROWING CONDITIONS & CARE

  • Easy to grow

  • 12 x 24” H. Spreads over time

  • Drought tolerant but thrives in slightly moist conditions

  • Sensitive to poor drainage

  • Cold hardy and tough

  • Rabbit and deer resistant

  • Perfect along shaded borders and woodland gardens

  • Beautiful when planted under deciduous trees as a ground cover

  • After a long winter, the large evergreen leaves look flattened and tattered. Remove the worst of these before the flower stalks begin to grow. Do not remove leaves prior to that or may harm plant.

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Hellebore
Hellebore
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Hellebore
Hellebore
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Helleborus orientalis 'Pink Lady' Lenten Rose
Helleborus orientalis 'Pink Lady' Lenten Rose
Helleborus x hybridus
Helleborus x hybridus
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HELLEBORES AVAILABLE AT VINEYARD GARDEN

  • Hellebore Ice N' Roses® Bianco (Monrovia)

  • Hellebore Ice N' Roses® Red (Monrovia)

  • HelleboreIce N' Roses® Rosado (Monrovia)

  • Helleborus x iburgensis Ice N' Roses® Merlot Hellebore (Monrovia)

  • Hellebore Ice N' Roses® Rose (Monrovia)

  • Helleborus Paris in Pink (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus Rio Carnival (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus Romantic Getaway (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus Maid of Honor (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus Wedding Bells (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus Spanish Flare (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus New York Night (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus Rome in Red (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus Snowbells (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus French Kiss (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus Sandy Shores (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus Ivory Prince (Walter’s Garden)

  • Helleborus Irish Luck (Walter’s Garden)

A hardy, deer resistant perennial with evergreen foliage, long-blooming flowers and multi seasonal interest!

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MARCH GARDEN TIPS
EARLY SPRING COLOR
In MARCH, DEER RESISTANT, PERENNIALS, PLANT PROFILES Tags perennial plant, Hellebore
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PIERIS JAPONICA

March 7, 2026 Karen Logan

Pieris japonica illustration by karen blackerby logan

PIERIS JAPONICA

(ANDROMEDA)

Pieris japonica is a broadleaf evergreen shrub that provides multiseason interest. In early spring, their cascading, delicate, bell shaped flowers bloom for about two weeks. The blooms range in color from white to pink. Simultaneously, bright pink, red, or bronze new foliage emerges, gradually transforming into glossy, oblong evergreen leaves. Beadlike flower buds form in late summer and hold steadfast through winter against their evergreen backdrop.

Deer resistant, slow growing and shade tolerant, Pieris japonica are ideal for adding year round color to mixed borders.

Pieris japonica in late winter

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GROWING CONDITIONS & CARE

Pieris japonica are beautiful year round. They are easy to grow but need to be shielded from rough weather conditions, such as intense wind or rain and do not do well in soggy soil. Keep soil moist and well drained.

  • Growth: 9–12 ft. tall, 6–8 ft. wide, slow growing

  • Light: Sun, partial shade. In Martha’s Vineyard is can be treated as a full sun plant.

  • Soil: Prefers rich, acidic, moist but well-drained soil

  • Bloom Time: Late winter, early spring

  • Flower Color: White, pink

  • Deer resistant!!

  • Good choice for foundations and shrub borders

  • Smaller dwarf varieties can also be planted in containers

 (photo credit Ray Ewing)
(photo credit Ray Ewing)
photo: Ray Ewing
photo: Ray Ewing
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Pieris japonica in late winter
Pieris japonica in late winter
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 (photo credit Ray Ewing) photo: Ray Ewing pieris+japonica1.jpg PXL_20230505_173639208.PORTRAIT.ORIGINAL.jpg Pieris japonica in late winter PXL_20240327_143707277.PORTRAIT.jpg PXL_20240327_150005465.jpg PXL_20240327_150028329.PORTRAIT.ORIGINAL.jpg

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SUCCESSION GARDENING
(PLANT PROFILE) NARCISSUS

HAPPY GARDENING!

In DEER RESISTANT, MARCH, PLANT PROFILES Tags pieris japonica, broad leaf evergreens, spring blooming shrub
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EVERGREEN TREES AND SHRUBS FOR SHADE

July 19, 2024 Karen Logan

Camellia illustration by Karen Blackerby Logan

EVERGREEN TREES &

SHRUBS FOR SHADE

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Broadleaf Evergreens are known to tolerate shade and many will also grow well in full sun. With their year round foliage they can add interest to your beds, woodland borders or create screening in a shady spot between you and your neighbor. Broadleaf evergreens can give you the privacy you need. They can also create fabulous backdrops to deciduous plants that flower. Plant them young and they will grow larger every year. We also carry several species of smaller broadleaf evergreen shrubs that can take shade. These work well in foundation plantings or in your shrub or perennial beds.

Deer resistant broadleaf evergreens we like to recommend are Pieris japonica, Mahonias and Osmanthus heterophyllus.

Pieris japonica illustration by karen blackerby logan

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Prunus schipkaensis (Skip Laurel)

EVERGREEN TREE & SHRUB VARIETIES

  • Azaleas

  • Leucothoe

  • Osmanthus heterophyllus (False Holly) : Seldom severely damaged by deer. Looks like holly. We have found the species heterophyllus to be hardy, able to survive in dense shade and they are deer resistant. The flowers are fragrant! We carry a popular variegated variety called Goshiki.

  • Pieris japonica (Andromedas): Blooms in spring with panicles of beautiful bells mostly in white. We do carry a pink blooming one. Can grow 6-8ft tall and 5-6ft wide. We carry dwarf ones as well. Deer resistant.

  • Skimmia japonica: Needs a male and a female to be planted together for the female to berry up.

  • Skimmia reevesiana: Rarely damaged by deer. Does not need a male to cross pollinate like Skimmia japonica.

  • Prunus schipkaensis (Skip Laurels): They will easily get 6-8ft tall. Good for flowers and for screening.

  • Photinia fraserii: At the margins of its hardiness zone. It has handsome evergreen foliage. The new growth is reddish and in cold weather the leaves turn reddish again. It can grow over 6ft tall and wide.

    Leucothoe, Skimmia and some Pieris japonica are examples of smaller broadleaf evergreen shrubs that can take shade.

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Camellia japonica

CAMELLIAS & AUCUBAS

Camellias and Aucubas should be planted near foundation plantings or by a stone wall for the heat they absorb during a sunny day. They may get some die back during a very cold winter. Prune the dead ones out in the spring. Camellias have shiny lovely evergreen foliage and flowers that look like Peonies. Aucubas need a male to berry up. Aucuba Mr. Goldstrike will pollinate Aucuba serratifolia, which is known for producing large red, berry like fruit.

  • Aucuba japonica

    • serratifolia

    • Mr. Goldstrike

  • Camellia April Pink

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Buxus Green Gem

BUXUS

(Rarely damaged by deer)

  • Buxus Winter Green 

  • Buxus Green Beauty 

  • Buxus Variegata

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Rhododendron Catawba

RHODODENDRONS

Roseum Elegans & Catawba Rhododendron get over 10ft tall. Plant them young and they will grow larger each year. Great for flowers and for screening.

  • Catawba Rhododendron (Native)

  • Maximum Rhododendron (Native)

  • PGM Rhododendron

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Mahonia Winter Sun

MAHONIA

(All Native) (Rarely damaged by deer)

Mahonias are also known as Oregon Grape Holly. They bear panicles of purple fruit after flowering that look like grapes.

  • Mahonia repens 

  • Mahonia Winter Sun

  • Mahonia Charity 

  • Mahonia Arthur Menzies

  • Mahonia nervosa 

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Ilex crenata Steeds

HOLLIES

Hollies are always a good choice for shade. We carry American, English, Japanese Chinese and hybrid Hollies. Several of the Japanese Hollies (Ilex crenata) are smaller shrubs. Blue Hollies (Meserve Hybrids) are like shrub Hollies instead of tree Hollies and can be pruned and kept a bit shorter. The Hollies need a male to pollinate the female to get the berries. We also grow specialty Hollies from cuttings. Ask at the nursery about our collection.

  • Meserve Hybrids (Blue Hollies)

  • Ilex Dragon Slayer

  • Ilex mes Blue Maid

  • Ilex Robin

  • Ilex x Greenleaf

  • Ilex crenata

    • Ilex Steeds (Ocassionally severely damaged by deer)

    • Hoogendorn

    • Soft Touch

    • Sky Pencil

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Pieris japonica
Pieris japonica
Pieris japonica
Pieris japonica
Ilex Dragon Slayer
Ilex Dragon Slayer
Ilex Robin
Ilex Robin
Azalea 'PJM'
Azalea 'PJM'
Rhodendron screening
Rhodendron screening
Winter Sun Mahonia
Winter Sun Mahonia
Buxus
Buxus
Skip Cherry Laurel
Skip Cherry Laurel
Camellia
Camellia
Camellia sasanqua
Camellia sasanqua
Pieris japonica Pieris japonica Ilex Dragon Slayer Ilex Robin Azalea 'PJM' Rhodendron screening Winter Sun Mahonia Buxus Skip Cherry Laurel Camellia Camellia sasanqua

In general we do not recommend you plant conifers in shade. They may not die but they will grow long and leggy. Your much better off planting a Holly, Mahonia or Osmanthus (if you have deer).

native plant finder

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evergreen shrubs

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In EVERGREENS, GARDEN TIPS, NATIVE PLANTS, DEER RESISTANT, JULY, FIELD NOTES Tags trees for shade, shrubs for shade, deer resistant, ilex, native trees, native shrubs, evergreen trees, evergreen shrubs
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SUMMER BLOOMING TREES & SHRUBS

June 14, 2024 Karen Logan

September Border filled with blooming shrubs and perennials: Vitex (purple), Crape Myrtles (white and pink), Rudbeckia & Hibiscus.

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JOIN US THIS SATURDAY MORNING

_______________

GARDEN WORKSHOP

FUNDAMENTALS FOR GARDEN DESIGN

SATURDAY JUNE 15TH // 11:00AM // VINEYARD GARDENS

Please join us in a hands on garden design workshop discussing how to plan a garden. Bring pictures to get questions answered. We look forward to seeing you there! 

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SUMMER BLOOMING

TREES & SHRUBS

Shrubs and trees offer numerous benefits to your landscape

Shrubs and trees are the living structures that make a garden more dynamic. They add depth, weight, height and multiple season interest to a space. Not only do they enrich the landscape with colorful vegetation, flowers, fruit and winter interest, they provide food and shelter for a variety of species. Creating habitat and maximum biodiversity is essential to providing for pollinators. Adding native shrubs and trees transforms environments into climate resilient landscapes through erosion control, drought tolerance and flooding.

Hypericum & Hydrangea paniculata

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Clethra alnifolia

SWEET PEPPERBUSH (Native)

Clethra is a wonderful addition to any garden, a versatile shrub that can thrive in most conditions. Typically found in open woodlands or swamps along the Atlantic coast this workhorse can flower from full sun to shade. Clethra prefers moist soil but can even adjust to dry, compact soil. It is a sweet scented native shrub that is a pollinator magnet. The white spire blooms lure butterflies, bees and hummingbirds. In addition, to being a hardy shrub, Clethera has year round interest. The deep green summer leaves turn yellow in autumn and in winter clusters of attractive seed pods remain.

  • USES: Seaside plantings, mass plantings, hedges or rain gardens

Clethra alnifolia

Clethra (in foreground and flanking the stairs)

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Vitex castus-agnus

CHASTE TREE

Vitex is a beautiful summer blooming shrub. A deciduous, multi-trunk shrub with fragrant lilac blooms backed by unique aromatic gray-green foliage. Bees and many other pollinators are attracted to its flowers and foliage. In addition, Vitex are deer resistant, moderately salt tolerant and have good drought tolerance once established. Full sun.

USES: Shrub border or train for use as a small tree to accent the landscape or patio.

Vitex castus-agnus with a Rose of Sharon

Vitex castus-agnus

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Lagerstroemia

CRAPE MYRTLE

Crape Myrtle is a deciduous tree that performs best in full sun. Loved for their showy, long lasting summer flowers and their naturally sculpted trunks with attractive exfoliating bark. Crape Myrtle comes in a range of sizes from dwarf 2-3’ tall shrubs to standard tree size of about 20-30’ tall. The larger ones are often pollarded, a type of hard pruning that keeps the plant smaller and blooms more profuse.


USE: Focal tree, a hedge or as part of a border

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Hypericum

ST JOHNS WORT

Midsummer this outstanding pollinator shrub is adorned with vibrant yellow blooms with abundant pollen bearing stamens, backed by gray blue fine textured foliage. During the winter the attractive three chamber seed pods remain, offering food for birds and late season visual interest. St John’s Wort prefers moist well drained soil but are highly adaptable and can withstand drought and soil compaction. They grow naturally on rocky ledges, in sandy areas and woodland openings. Prune hard in spring . They bloom on the new growth.

We carry 3 or 4 cultivars. Hypericum hidcote is very popular with it’s blue foliage and longevity.

USE: Mass plantings borders or hedges

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Hydrangea

paniculata

Panicle Hydrangeas are the no fuss hydrangea with long lasting blooms. They are the autumn stars when most other shrubs are no longer blooming. Hydrangea panicle goes through a color transformation starting with early summer white that fades to shades of pink or red before drying to beige in the winter. Their nectar-rich flowers attract butterflies and bees late into the season, providing them with a vital food source. They adapt to full sun or part sun. Some popular panicle hydrangeas we carry are Limelight, Limelight Prime, Little Lime and Bobo. Check out our latest blog with all the varieties of hydrangea we carry.

USES: Natural fence or border, focal point, erosion control or containers.

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garden tips

JUNE

hydrangeas

learn more

In DEER RESISTANT, JUNE, FLOWERING SHRUBS, SHRUBS, FIELD NOTES Tags summer blooming shrubs, summer blooming trees, clethera, vitex, crepe myrtle, st johns wort, hydrangea paniculata
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DECIDUOUS TREES AND SHRUBS FOR SHADE

June 29, 2023 Karen Logan

Fothergilla illustration by Karen Blackerby Logan

DECIDUOUS TREES AND SHRUBS FOR SHADE

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Sorbaria sorbifolia (Tree Astilbe )

Clethra alnifolia

FOTHERGILLA
(Native) (Deer Resistant)

  • Fothergilla Mt. Airy

  • Fothergilla gardenii (Dwarfed)

SPIREA
(Seldom severely damaged by deer)

  • Spirea Anthony Waterer

  • Spirea Snow Mound

VIBURNUM

  • Viburnum dentatum (Native) (Rarely damaged by deer)

    • Viburnum dentatum Blue Muffin (Rarely damaged by deer)

    • Viburnum dentatum Sparkler (Rarely damaged by deer)

  • Viburnum plicatums (a non native species)

    • Viburnum plicatum Mariesii

    • Viburnum plicatum Popcorn

  • Viburnum carlesii Spice Baby 

DECIDUOUS TREES & SHRUBS

  • Amelanchier canadensis, Serviceberry (Native) (Seldom severely damaged by deer)

  • Aesculus parviflora (Bottlebrush Buckeye) (Native) (Rarely damaged by deer)

  • Deciduous Azaleas (Native) Deer love evergreen Azaleas but are less likely to eat deciduous ones.

  • Heptacodium micinoides (Seven-Son Flower) (Rarely damaged by deer) Fragrant flowers late in the season followed by beautiful fall display.

  • Rhus aromatica 'Gro Low' (Rarely damaged by deer)

  • Sorbaria sorbifolia (Tree Astilbe ) (Rarely damaged by deer) Spreads vigorously. Try 'SEM' for a more compact and controlled cultivar.

CLETHRA alnifolia
(All Native) (Rarely damaged by deer)

  • Clethra Vanilla Spice

  • Clethra Hummingbird 

  • Clethra Ruby Spice 

HYDRANGEA

  • Hydrangea arborescens (Native)

  • Hydrangea Macrophylla (Big Leaf) (Occasionally severely damaged by deer)

  • Hydrangea petiolaris (Climbing) (Occasionally severely damaged by deer)

  • Hydrangea quercifolia (Oakleaf) (Occasionally severely damaged by deer)

Amelanchier canadensis, Serviceberry
Amelanchier canadensis, Serviceberry
Oakleaf Hydrangea
Oakleaf Hydrangea
Hydrangea macrophylla
Hydrangea macrophylla
Fothergilla Major Mt Airy
Fothergilla Major Mt Airy
Fothergilla
Fothergilla
Spirea Snowmound
Spirea Snowmound
Viburnum plicatum
Viburnum plicatum
Amelanchier canadensis, Serviceberry Oakleaf Hydrangea Hydrangea macrophylla Fothergilla Major Mt Airy Fothergilla Spirea Snowmound Viburnum plicatum

[plant profile]

Hydrangea macrophylla

trees for wildlife

national wildlife federation

In JUNE, GARDEN TIPS, NATIVE PLANTS, DEER RESISTANT, FIELD NOTES Tags trees for shade, shrubs for shade, fothergilla, deer resistant, native trees, native shrubs, deciduous trees, deciduous shrubs
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[PLANT PROFILE] CLERODENDRUM

August 1, 2022 Karen Logan

Clerodendrum trichotomum

CLERODENDRUM TRICHOTOMUM

[HARLEQUIN GLORY-BOWER]

In mid-summer and fall Clerodendrum adds a striking show when other woody plants are not in bloom!

MID-SUMMER BLOOM

Clerodendrum trichotomum (Harlequin Glory-Bower) is the only Clerodendrum hardy this far north. A deer resistant, flowering, deciduous shrub that begins blooming mid-summer with fragrant soft white flowers. The flowers have a sweet delicate aroma and are large enough to make a statement. A great addition to a late season garden when many other shrubs are not in bloom.

FALL INTEREST

In the fall, Clerodendrum has a wonderful effect. The flowers turn into a very interesting seed pod, bright purplish-blue berries adorned by thick star-shaped red calyces. In addition, the foliage changes into a beautiful yellow fall color. A show stopper indeed!

Clerodendrum has large heart shaped leaves which produce a peanut odor when crushed.

attracts Hummingbirds, butterflies, honeybees & other pollinators!


WHERE TO PLANT

  • Clerodendrum is a large shrub that grows between 8-10’ tall.

  • Stands best alone because it takes over. Plant it where it has plenty of room to spread and colonize. It will spread as far as you let it but it can be controlled.

  • Full sun to part shade. Clerodendrum prefers full sun for best shape and flowering but can tolerate and flower in partial shade. In partial shade, it’s already loose habit will be even more open.

“Our Clerodendrum is blooming now and fills our entire patio with a sweet fragrance!” Chris Wiley, co-owner Vineyard Gardens

Clerodendrum trichotomum in the spring/early summer

Clerodendrum trichotomum in the summer

Clerodendrum trichotomum in the fall.

Clerodendrum

Clerodendrum

deer resistant

PLANTS

August Plants

In GARDEN TIPS, AUGUST, DEER RESISTANT, PLANT PROFILES Tags flowering shrubs, Deer resistant shrubs, pollinator friendly shrubs, harlequin glory bower, mid summer flowering shrub, Clerodendrum trichotomum
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484 State Rd. West Tisbury, MA 02575

Mon - Sat : 8am - 5pm / Sun : 9am-3pm

(508) 693.8512