Flowering shrubs for winter

In winter, the garden seems to be dull. To bring a touch of cheerfulness, think of winter flowering shrubs, so you can still enjoy a beautiful show from November to March, despite the cold.

The flowering cherry tree


Installed as an isolated specimen to enjoy its splendor, Prunus subbhirtella 'Autumnalis Rosea' will be among the earliest to bloom. It blooms from November to March in successive waves of small, soft pink flowers at the rhythm of the warm weather. Its development being limited, it can be installed in small gardens.

Dogwoods


Cornus mas and Cornus officinalis are very easy to grow and offer the spectacle of their yellow flowers in February-March. They like most soils and are very hardy, neither frost nor snow can harm them.

Winter jasmine


Here is a shrub that likes the shade and blooms in the heart of winter. Winter Jasmine (Jasminum nudiflorum) displays small bright yellow stars on its bare branches. It tolerates most soils and is equally well suited to be trained against a wall or left free to cover a slope.

Viburnum


Viburnum tinus, known by its vernacular name of 'Viorne', has a compact habit and is covered with slightly fragrant pinkish-white inflorescences throughout the winter. For variety, consider Viburnum x bodnantense and Viburnum fragans, which will bloom from November to March. The berries attract birds!

Sarcococca


It looks like a boxwood with pointed leaves from afar, but it is in fact a Sarcococca, a shrub of limited size (0.50 x 1.50 m) which starts to bloom at the end of January with original and fragrant white flowers.

The mahonia


An original shrub with prickly, tiered foliage, the mahonia is covered from February onwards with crowns of spikes of yellow flowers with fragrances reminiscent of lily of the valley. This shrub is ideal as a defensive hedge.

Witch Hazel


This shrub with a flared habit and elegant silhouette is adorned with fragrant lemon-yellow or slightly orange flowers from January. Another attraction of witch hazel is its foliage, which takes on flamboyant hues in spring.

Japanese quince


There are many varieties of Chaenomeles. If you choose them well, you will be able to stagger the blooms from December to March with a palette ranging from white to red, passing through pink and orange!

Edgeworthia


This little known shrub deserves its place in gardens where the climate remains mild because it is not very hardy (from -5° to -10°C once well installed). From February to April, it produces clusters of fragrant white and yellow flowers. Some cultivars of the edgeworthia like 'Red Dragon' put the red in the honor!

Scented winter shrubs

Most winter flowering shrubs are divinely scented, discover their scents.

Scented shrubs for the balcony

Sarcococca humilis: this small evergreen shrub grows very well in a pot. It forms in a few seasons a nice compact clump with dark green and glossy foliage. Small discreet cream flowers are present all winter long in the armpit of the leaves. They emit a very powerful vanilla scent. They are followed by navy blue berries. H and E: 0,5 to 1 m.
Its needs: half-shade, shade. Fresh and humusy substratum. Slight pruning after flowering.

Daphne odora: it is the most perfumed of all the daphnes. Its light green evergreen foliage edged with cream is covered all winter with a generous bright pink bloom with flowery and spicy notes evoking jasmine, carnation and clove. H : 1,5 m. E: 1 m.
Its needs: half-shade, sheltered from draughts. Very well drained soil, cool in summer, rich in humus. No pruning required.

Scented shrubs for the terrace


Mimosa : belonging to the genus Acacia, this small tree prefers mild climates. Its clusters of small golden yellow pompons illuminate the winter decor. The scent is reminiscent of sugar and honey. H and W: 2 to 4 m. Its needs: full sun, well drained soil, not calcareous (the species retinoides, the "mimosa of the four seasons" tolerates a little calcareous). When the cold is intense, protect the mimosa with a forcing veil or put the pot in a clear, unheated room.

Skimmia japonica : this shrub with a compact and rounded habit offers a dark green, shiny and leathery evergreen foliage. The plant is dioecious. The flowering of the male subjects is more beautiful than that of the females. From February, small bunches of creamy star-shaped flowers with purple stamens emit a scent reminiscent of vanilla, lily of the valley and orange tree. It is the female plants which offer a splendid brilliant red fructification. H and W: 1 to 1,5 m.
Its needs: light sun, half-shade, fresh soil. Pruning unnecessary (slow growth).

Viburnum farreri : formerly named V.fragrans, this beautiful deciduous shrub is a real winter incense with notes of vanilla, honey and almond. The small clusters of pale pink flowers can be seen from autumn, accompanying us until early spring. They are followed by red fruits. H: 2 to 3 m and W: 2 m. Choose the cultivar 'Nanum' which reaches 1 m and is decorative all year round.
Its needs: sun (shelter from the morning sun, avoid eastern exposures), cool soil. Prune after flowering if necessary. You can also fall for the Camellia sasanqua (blooms from autumn to the middle of winter). Our favorites for the small garden

Daphne mezereum: this deciduous shrub with soft green foliage justifies its name of 'pretty wood' with its generous pink or purple bloom, which lasts several weeks from February to April. Its flowers scent jasmine but also hyacinth, carnation and clove. They are followed by small red drupes scarlet very toxic but appreciated by the birds. H and E: 50 cm to 2 m. Slow growth.
Its needs: light sun, half-shade. Well-drained soil but cool in summer. Does not like to be moved.

Witch hazel: the "witches' hazel" is a deciduous shrub with an upright or spreading habit that blooms in late winter. Its flowers in light sulphur yellow, copper or brick red pompons are scattered along the branches. Their scent is reminiscent of honey. For its more intense perfume, prefer the species H.mollis to the hybrids Hamamelis x intermedia. H and E : 1 to 2 m. Magnificent autumn coloring of the foliage.
Its needs: sun, half-shade, shelter from drafts, cool and acid soil. No pruning (slow growth).


Mahonia x media 'Charity' : this large erect shrub becomes rounder with time. It offers a very decorative evergreen foliage. The large, leathery, dark green leaves have very prickly edges. The very long flowering period begins in the heart of autumn and lasts until March. The large clusters of golden yellow spikes perfume the air, evoking the scent of lily of the valley. The flowers are followed by navy blue plum berries, very appreciated by birds. H and W: 2 to 3 m.
Its needs: light sun, half-shade. Fertile, fresh and humus soil. No pruning (slow growth).

You can also fall for the Viburnum carlesii (flowering at the end of winter).

Scented shrubs for the country hedge


Abeliophyllum distichum : often called white forsythia, this little-known deciduous shrub has an upright and flared bushy habit. It blooms very generously from February (or March depending on the climate). The clusters of white to pinkish white tubular flowers smell like almonds! They are followed by heart-shaped and winged seeds. H and W: 1,5 to 2 m.
Its needs: sun, half-shade, shelter of the cold draughts. Fertile and fresh soil. Pruning unnecessary (slow growth).

Chimonanthus praecox : this large deciduous and erect shrub deserves the name of "winter sweetness" that the English give it. From the end of autumn until March, it is covered with a multitude of small discreet bells, waxy yellow speckled with purple, which scent the air for meters around. Their perfume evokes honey and exotic fruits (mango, passion fruit, pineapple). H : 2 to 3 m. E: 2 m.
Its needs: sun, ordinary soil. Useless pruning (slow growth).

Corylopsis pauciflora : cousin of the witch hazel, this deciduous shrub with a flared habit blooms massively from the end of February. The small, drooping clusters of primrose yellow flowers have a flowery scent with fruity accents of sweet orange. Beautiful autumn foliage. H and W: 1.5 to 2 m.
Its needs: sun, half-shade, shelter from draughts, fertile, light, rather acidic and cool soil in summer. Pruning unnecessary (slow growth).

Lonicera fragrantissima : this shrubby honeysuckle quickly forms a large bush with a spreading or even drooping habit. The deciduous to semi-evergreen foliage is compensated by the long winter blooming whose sweet perfume evokes honeysuckle, jasmine and orange blossom. The small cream flowers are renewed from December to March. They are followed by translucent coral-red berries that are toxic for humans but appreciated by birds. H: 2 to 3 m. E: 2,5 to 3,5 m.
Its needs: sun, half-shade, well-drained soil. Pruning unnecessary except to limit development.

Viburnum x bodnantense: this winter viburnum forms a large deciduous shrub with a rather stiff upright habit. It can bloom from November to March even if it is very cold! Its small round bunches of soft pink flowers in bud and white when blooming are reminiscent of jasmine. H : 3 m. E: 2 m.
Its needs: sun, half-shade, humus soil, fresh in summer. Pruning unnecessary.

Viburnum x burkwoodii : this hybrid quickly forms a large rounded bush with shiny dark green semi-evergreen foliage. At the end of the winter, bouquets of pink and then waxy white flowers adorn the plant, diffusing orange blossom scents all around. They are followed by red fruits becoming black in autumn. H and E: 1,5 to 2 m.
Its needs: sun, half-shade, humus soil, fertile and fresh in summer. Pruning unnecessary.

But also: Mahonia aquifolium (flowering in March-April).

Deciduous or evergreen leaves

There are many types of trees and shrubs. Some lose their leaves in the fall, others do not. This difference in vegetation is very important depending on the use of the plant in the garden. It is best to know this when purchasing.

Evergreen trees and shrubs


They are ideal for creating privacy or windbreak hedges because they do not recede in the wrong season. They are also ideal for planting in isolation. An evergreen shrub will always have a more beautiful aesthetic impact than a subject without leaves for part of the year.

Evergreen plants renew their leaves gradually and over the long term, so they always look green. Generally, the persistence of foliage corresponds to an environmental adaptation. The leaves are tougher, often thicker too because the cells that compose them have reinforced walls. They had to adapt to the heat or the intense cold. Thus, shrubs originating from southern areas, with a dry and hot climate, have developed tough, often glossy leaves that limit evaporation to a maximum. In the same way, to fight against the cold, conifers have modified the structure of their leaves, which have become needles or scales that are very tough and resistant over time. The leaf area is thus reduced, which makes it possible to better resist the cold. The foliage is then renewed in stages spread over several years for some species. This is why it seems that these trees and shrubs do not lose their leaves.

The flowering of evergreen shrubs is sometimes less ornamental but that is the price to pay!

Deciduous trees and shrubs


In autumn, when the luminosity weakens, the leaves are no longer able to store and transform energy. Nature being well done, a thick layer will form on the petiole of the leaves preventing the passage of the sap. The energy storage is then done in the wood tissues and the roots. Leaves without chlorophyll and therefore without green pigment take on flamboyant hues. Only deciduous trees and shrubs offer such a spectacle, literally transforming the garden into a dream setting. Winter arrives next, it corresponds to the rest period, ideal for planting.

In spring, with the lengthening of the days and the heat, these plants resume an intense activity producing leaves and flowers. The show starts again each year in an explosion of colors and floral scents!

Did you know about the variegated foliage?

Some information common to shrubs with variegated foliage...

Why is my variegated shrub losing its colors?


If it is a variety marked with cream or white, there is a good chance that it is too exposed to the sun. Chlorophyll, which is a light-sensitive pigment, begins to dominate again. Transplant the shrub to the shade and you will see the variegation appear again. If it is a golden variegation, it is the opposite, because the yellow pigment needs a strong luminosity to acquire all its intensity. In the shade, the color becomes more of a lime.

Did you know?

  • Evergreen foliage does not fall in winter (in this case, it is called deciduous). However, evergreen leaves are not eternal. It lives from 3 to 8 years depending on the species, the plant constantly renewing part of its foliage. Contrary to a deciduous, the evergreen does not undergo a total stop of vegetation during the bad season. It continues to live in slow motion, which requires it to be supplied with water all year round, a very common "oversight" yet sometimes fatal to shrubs grown in pots.
  • Evergreen plants are generally cooler than deciduous ones (conifers are an exception). Most evergreen shrubs are found in tropical climates. The colder the geographic area, the fewer the native evergreens.
  • The usually green color of the leaf is due to the predominance of chlorophyll, a blue-green pigment. But if other pigments such as carotenoids (yellow-orange, red-brown) and anthocyanins (pink, purple, red) are more concentrated than normal, the leaf becomes colored.
  • Most variegation results from the partial disappearance of chlorophyll in the leaf blade. It is often the result of a mutation, which implies the obligation to multiply it by vegetative way (cutting, layering, grafting).
  • The very discolored cultivars pose problems of propagation. Indeed, in some of them, the plant does not have a sufficient quantity of chlorophyll for a fragment of cutted branch to live in autonomy the time to take root. It is therefore necessary to multiply these plants by grafting, which results in a higher selling price.
  • The botanical terminology distinguishes the different types of variegations. Margined ('Marginata') is bordered by a thin band of color. Maculated ('Maculata') has a large spot of color, usually central. Striated or marbled ('Striata') presents more or less fine and regular colored lines. Punctate ('Punctata') is scattered with small colored spots. Reticulated ('Reticulata') is decorated with a colored net, often following the pattern of the veins.
  • The nomenclature not accepting any more Latin terminology for all the cultivars obtained after 1956, many are adorned with names with Anglo-Saxon consonance, because the breeders of plants seek an international career for their creations. The 'Gold', 'Silver', 'Cream', 'Rainbow', 'Harlequin', 'Chamaeleon', thus bloom on many plants.
  • It is necessary to be wary of the panachures which can hide certain deficiencies or a bad adaptation of the plant to its conditions of culture. Some mottling is also due to viruses (but it is most often floral mottling, as is the case for tulips).
  • Gardeners often like to invent words, so they call "suffused" leaves whose discoloration is finely and irregularly degraded by the presence of small green spots more or less dense. This type of leaves could also be called "sandy" as in Aucuba japonica 'Crotonifolia' for example. This characteristic is more common in perennial plants. It is also sometimes found in some flowers (iris and roses in particular).

Stories of elderberry

Since prehistoric times, plants have accompanied men in their daily activities. As a shrub on the edge of the human habitat, the elder has many facets. Nourishing, medicinal, utilitarian, artistic, it was once linked to the protective or evil forces of nature.

A close companion


A familiar silhouette, the black elder, Sambucus nigra, can be seen in open hedges, in the back of gardens, along paths. A guest of ruins, of abandoned houses with collapsed roofs, a lover of nitrogen-rich soil, it follows man in his daily life. Close by its habitat, this shrub is also close by its uses. Its large trays of tiny white flowers, its long hollow stems in sprays, its short, thick, tortuous trunk; but also its malodorous foliage, its marked bark, and its small dark fruits; everything in it is used. From time immemorial, men have appreciated its multiple properties, with caution, sometimes with concern, in the right dose, to avoid possible toxicities. They have also learned not to confuse it with the heathy elder, Sambucus ebulus, a toxic herb.

Elderberry recipes


In mid-spring, elderberry inflorescences bloom. Known for lemonade, the flowers are macerated in the sun in water with sugar, lemon, vinegar, they will compose a pleasant sparkling drink. Cooked with sugar, a little agar-agar, they will be tasted in translucent jelly. Soaked in dough, they will resemble the more famous acacia fritters.

At the end of summer, elderberries are harvested. Raw, and not very mature, they are purgative and vomiting. Ripe, cooked with sugar or honey, they will be used to prepare the elderberry rob, half jam half syrup, very old recipe, with a particular taste. They also take part in the grenadine syrup, alongside raspberries, blackcurrants, redcurrants, strawberries, lemon. And if flowers and berries were not enough, the very young shoots were also consumed, cooked in several waters they appeared at the sides of the "vegetable herbs". Their medicinal properties made the recipe look like a doctor's prescription.

Medicinal properties


The elderberry lists many medicinal properties, from the leaves, to the flowers, to the fruits, to the inner bark, it concentrates for a single shrub many active substances. To use with precautions, and right dosages, the intoxications being real. Any use of medicinal plants requires wise advice, elderberry reminds it by the diversity of its actions, different according to the parts of the plant used, their state, fresh, dry, cooked. As an indication, and the list is far from being complete, the elder is purgative, diuretic, sudorific, antirheumatic, pectoral, dermatological, analgesic, healing; the infusion of the dry flowers is used as eyewash. The uses are internal, teas or decoctions, external, in cataplasm. Simply, and without risk, the crumpled sheets are used to alleviate the punctures.

Uses of elderberry


The gardener will find in the elder leaf purin a precious ally to repel bugs, aphids, caterpillars, mealy bugs, small mammals, voles and moles. It will take advantage of the anti-fungal properties of the dried flowers to preserve the apples, with a pleasant side effect of transmitting a little pineapple taste. The same flowers, harvested in corymbs and dried whole in spring, will act as an anti-germinant for potatoes. The wood craftsmen will forsake its brittle, hollow stems, but will appreciate the old wood of the trunk, hard, dense, fine, used in other times by the turners and the table makers. And if the pith of the branches is still used for microscopic preparations, the children of the bush extracted it to recover long hollow tubes, with multiple vocations, flutes or blowpipes.

The shrub of artists


Elderberry is a musical plant that can be transformed in a few minutes into a flute, a kazoo or a whistle. Its branches are stripped of their soft internal marrow and the tube thus obtained, with bevelled notch, membrane, tricks of musician of the bushes, becomes the desired instrument. Or the bird call, to attract birds. Equipped with a piston at its end, the elder whistle modulates its song, the thrush misunderstands it... Another use of the hollow stem of the elder, appreciated by the children, the blowpipe, but also the firecracker or the water syringe. Plant games, forgotten in the corners of old hedges.

For the artist writer, the elderberry will offer the ink extracted from its small black fruits. Crushed, macerated, mixed with tea, alum and gum arabic, reduced, these fruits on paper have nuances to discover. Fabrics will also benefit from these dyeing properties, although the elderberry, Sambucus ebulus, seems more suitable.

Some stories...


The nocturnal perfume of elder flowers, appreciated or not, is irresistible, makes you lose your senses...

Judas was hanged in an elder tree, after which the fruits would have become bitter.

In the Middle Ages in the Pyrenees, one had to climb an elder tree to summon the devil.

Harry Potter's wand is made of elderberry.

To cut a branch to make a wand or a magic flute, one had to wait for the bells to ring, the demons being afraid of their sound.

So many regions, so many stories and legends in the imagination of men. The elder, a shrub with many faces, was rather beneficial and protective in the northern countries, more ambiguous, even evil, in the western regions.

Few plants offer as many uses as the elder. And then it settles willingly near human habitats, grows vigorously. It offers shelter and cover to birds, insects and spiders, promoting a welcome biodiversity. It is even said that fairies take refuge there, disappointed by the World...

Hydrangea panicule, family portrait

Originally from Asia and introduced in Europe at the end of the 19th century, panicled hydrangeas or Hydrangea paniculata are robust and vigorous shrubs whose heavy clusters of flowers often make the branches that carry them bend.

The numerous conical inflorescences of the panicled hydrangea evoke the flowers of the lilac. Depending on the variety, the cream or white base of the flowers can be tinted with green, old pink or purple. The panicles are composed of tiny and numerous sterile flowers, sprinkled more or less generously, according to the variety, with large fertile flowers. These inflorescences last many weeks in summer and remain decorative until autumn.

The smallest: less than 1.5 m


They are THE solution for small spaces: pocket garden, terrace, balcony. Recently introduced on the market, they offer to all the pleasure of hosting a Hydrangea paniculata. 


Strawberry Sundae' ® : the little cousin of 'Strawberry Vanilla'.
Very bushy, balanced habit. Blooms from July onwards with a mixture of green, cream and pink shades. Colors intensify during the summer weeks. H : 1,2 m and W : 1 m. Sun, mid-shade.

Bobo' : the little darling of balconies
Very compact, very floriferous; it blooms from July onwards offering large creamy panicles first tinged with green which turn white as the weeks go by. H: 80 cm and W: 1,2 m. Sun, half-shade.

Medium-sized plants: less than 2 m


They can be placed anywhere: at the bottom of a bed, in large pots on the terrace, in a small country hedge. These cultivars reach 2 m in all directions. 

Red Diamond' ® : the reddest
This recent obtention (2011) produces from July luxuriant panicles (up to 35-40 cm long) at first white then more and more pink to finish wine-red in autumn. Very bushy habit. H: 1,5 m and W: 1,2 m. Sun, mid-shade.

Phantom' : very full panicles in XXL version
Very floriferous shrub, blooms from August. Stiff stems. White blooming that becomes pink and green with time. H and W : 2 m. Half-shade.


Vanille Fraise' © : an invitation to indulgence
Blooms starting in July, first vanilla-strawberry then crushed raspberry for very greedy cameos! H: 2 and W: 1,5 m. Sun to part shade.

Limelight' : tangy !
Blooms in August mixing cream and chartreuse green. Huge panicles up to 40 cm long but strong stems! As the weeks go by, the flowers lighten then turn pink. H and W: 2 m. Half-shade.

Mega Mindy' © remarkable in autumn
Blooms from July in large, light, creamy-white panicles that darken to wine-white in late summer. H : 2 and W : 1,8m. Sun, mid-shade. A recent obtention.

Praecox': flowers from June
Creamy, light, airy panicles. Well-bushy habit. H: 2 and E: 1,5. Sun, half-shade.

For the collectors : a new 'Prim'White ®' which blooms sometimes from May and offers light and elegant panicles cream then pure white. H : 1,5 m and W : 2 m. Beware exception which blooms on the wood of the previous year so prune after flowering.

Unique' : a sure value
Very vigorous. Impressive from August with its huge pure white panicles, mostly composed of sterile flowers. Bushy habit. H and W: 2 m. Half-shade.

The largest: more than 2m


They offer an irresistible summer interest to mixed hedges, to copses at the bottom of the garden, to large natural beds in country gardens. These Hydrangea paniculata happily exceed 2 m in all directions. Of course, they can be trimmed back a bit at the end of winter, but you might as well take advantage of their strong presence by placing them in the right place!

Pinky Winky' © : a festival of colors
A recent creation that blooms from July. Light panicles first cream then pink then bright red in autumn. H : 3 m. E : 2 m. Sun, part shade.

Grandiflora' : a classic that has proven itself
From August, huge inflorescences (up to 40 cm long) tightly packed in cream tinting to old pink as time goes by. H: 2 to 3 m (up to 5 m high when it likes it!). E: 2,5 m. Half-shade.

Kyushu' : grace and lightness
Long light panicles from July. Cream at first, then tinted with green and tan as the months go by. Erect habit. H : 3 m. E : 2 m. Sun, mid-shade.

'Tardiva' : flowers at the beginning of the school year
Long, creamy, light panicles in September-October. Open habit. H: 2.5 m. E: 5 ft. to 6 ft. Sun, semi-shade.

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