David Viburnum - Viburnum Davidii
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- Опубликовано: 1 янв 2025
- David viburnum - In this video we examine the facets of David viburnum, a gorgeous plant in zone 7 through 9 landscapes. David viburnum offers lush, dark green texture-rich leaves, as well as pinkish-white spring flowers and metallic blue fall berries.
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Makes a great container plant in my zone 6a climate and overwinters well my garage! Well worth it!
Looks like another winner to add to my collection. Love the green-red colors combo!
I use this in my tropical garden zone 8 in the Netherlands . Perfect next to other broadleaf evergreens like all the fatsia varieties .
Hey Jim, not related to this viburnum, I dug an Ackerman x Camellia that I planted last spring, out of my garden today. It was in sopping wet cold soil. Is it OK to leave it with the original root ball in my garage until maybe February? Zone six Buffalo New York.
Viburnum davidii x tinus 'Moonlit Lace' has been easier in my hot and humid Raleigh garden than either davidii or tinus. With that ease comes a beautifully dense healthy 5 x 5 shrub that can be shaped after a strong spring show of flower clusters. Dr. Dirr is a fan.
We've talked about it several times in videos at nurseries and at dirr's daughters house in the past. It is a good one for sure
Doesn't do well in the south mostly. Lasts a few years if you're lucky, mostly a west and Pacific Northwest lover as it HATES heat esp night time heat. That drooping of Jim's plant is because he's probably on the edge of where it will live. In Pac NW it is a much more robust shrub and leaves are horizontal and larger.
This plant didn't do well for me at all here in Statham, Georgia. All 3 of them died within 1-2yrs of planting. Perhaps the area was a little too sunny (?). 😕
Didn't work for me either, Zone 8b. It was planted at the end of April and looked healthy until summer. It was mounded up for better drainage and in the back of a north facing foundation garden bed surrounded by plants. It was in full shade until after 12pm, but full sun the rest of the day. Leaves and branches turned black from heat stress. I gave it extra water every day during the worst of the summer but it didn't help.
@Anekocarbuncle
My location was a little bit different in that they were exposed to northeastern morning sun, planted in front of my home (foundation). Their decline presented similarly, but I didn't water daily.
I like this plant but am very grateful for all the information in the comments. I am going to pass on this plant as I am too hot.
PNW zone 8B on a bank / terrace not watered...soil is horrible, in blasting full sun. Just a nice mound 3x5 here and we haven't touched it in 20 years.