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Compact Shrubs By Patricia Acton
Shrubs that stay in scale at maturity are a good fit for today’s
smaller gardens.
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Some of the best gifts come in small
packages, and many gardeners are discovering that the same holds true
for shrubs. Fortunately, for those who garden in small spaces, compact
selections of favorite garden shrubs are increasingly available.
There are many reasons why breeders are producing more and better
compact shrubs. One is to satisfy the needs of gardeners like me who
have relatively small properties. On my one-third acre, I simply don’t
have room for five or six full-size crape myrtles, or half a dozen
winterberry hollies; not, that is, if I want to have room for much else.
However, four of the five crape myrtles I am growing are dwarfs, and
there is plenty of room in my front yard for the grouping of compact
winterberries (Ilex verticillata ‘Red Sprite’). Not only are my small
shrubs beautiful, they allow me much more space to grow other plants.
Small is “In”
The interest in smaller shrubs is
“definitely the way things are going,” says Tim Wood, product
development manager at Spring Meadow Nursery in Grand Haven, Michigan.
“People are buying big houses on smaller lots. Also, landscapes are much
more diverse. It used to be that yards would have some junipers and yews
and not much else. Now people are looking for more color and diversity
in smaller spaces.”
According to Nina Bassuk, professor of
urban horticulture at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, shrubs of
all sizes have been undergoing a renaissance. “There’s lots of breeding
going on here and in Europe, lots of interest in dwarf plants and in
plants with interesting leaf color,” says Bassuk.
Another
factor driving the movement toward smaller shrubs is that most
homeowners, whether serious gardeners or not, are very interested in
anything that will save time and labor. I discovered this for myself
after planting black pussy willow (Salix melanostachys) at the corner of
my house a couple of years ago. I thought it was a great plant, with its
dark purplish stems and purplish-black catkins, which were striking in a
vase. What I didn’t count on, though, was the work involved in trying to
keep the willow from covering the corner window and taking over a
sizable part of the front yard. In fact, I got so tired of the constant
pruning that I was actually a bit relieved when it succumbed to drought.
“Most people no longer have the time to
be trimming and shearing things back. Who wants to have a forsythia that
is 10 to 12 feet tall that they’re going to have to whack back every
three or four years?” asks Wood, rhetorically. Much better, he says, to
choose one of the dwarf forsythias now available.
Wood believes the popularity of
perennials is also contributing to the interest in smaller shrubs.
“People are realizing that smaller shrubs can be worked into perennial
gardens, but require less care” than perennials, many of which need to
be regularly divided or staked.
Small shrubs that work as ground covers
are excellent choices for mixed borders agrees Bassuk, noting their
effectiveness in reducing weed problems. For this purpose, she
particularly recommends low-growing, spreading dogwood (Cornus racemosa
Muskingum™) and Forsythia ‘Courtasol’ (Gold Tide™). The latter, she
notes, “really seems to knock weeds out…it’s great on banks or places
where it’s hard to mow.”
Some Recommended Shrubs
Here are some dwarf and compact shrubs recommended for a variety of
garden sites:
Clethra alnifolia ‘Hummingbird’ (USDA
Hardiness Zones 3–9, AHS Heat Zones 9–1) is a dwarf form of summersweet.
Although most cultivars of summersweet mature at six to eight feet,
‘Hummingbird’ reaches just two-and-a-half to three-and-a-half feet tall
with a spreading habit. Its flowers are white and fragrant, blooming for
a period of several weeks in late summer. Leaves are a dark,
fresh-looking green, turning yellow in fall. In my yard, full-sized
summersweets such as ‘Pink Spires’ and ‘Ruby Spice’ flower at the same
time as ‘Hummingbird’. Another low-grower, ‘Compacta’, has similar
flowers but is less spreading.
Cornus alba ‘Red Gnome’ (Zones 2–8, 8–1)
is another shrub dogwood that can be effective as a ground cover; also
use as a specimen or in groups. Although a bit larger in stature than
Muskingum, ‘Red Gnome’ has a finer leaf texture. New growth is also
reddish, and the stems are bright red in winter.
Cornus
racemosa Muskingum™ (Zones 4–8, 8–3). A dwarf cultivar of gray dogwood,
Muskingum grows three feet tall by four to five feet wide; its spreading
habit makes it an excellent ground cover. It bears large white flowers
in spring, followed by bluish fruits and beautiful red foliage in fall.
The new leaves are also reddish. It’s tolerant of a variety of soils,
but grows best in sun to light shade.
Forsythia ‘Courtasol’ Gold Tide™ (Zones 5–8, 8–5) is a low-growing,
spreading forsythia (two to two-and-a-half feet tall by six feet or more
wide) with abundant yellow flowers in spring. Tim Wood describes the
foliage as “almost ferny,” and the leaf color as a light lime green. It
serves as an excellent ground cover and suppresses weeds well. Another
dwarf forsythia from the same breeder is F. 5intermedia Golden Peep™
which has a more upright shape than Gold Tide, growing to about three
feet tall or so. Wood says that its size makes it “perfect by the house
or deck.”
Itea virginica Little Henry® (Zones 6–9,
10–7) is a diminutive version of Virginia sweetspire. It has the same
lovely spires of white flowers in early summer, and the same excellent
red color in fall. Like other sweetspires, Little Henry is an easy-care
shrub that tolerates damp to dry soils in full sun or heavy shade. It
grows about two feet in height and spreads slowly by underground roots.
It’s ideal as a ground cover or in a mixed border. …
Photo credits for Clethra alnifolia ‘Hummingbird’ and Itea virginica
Little Henry: Courtesy of Spring Meadow Nursery
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