Taylor's Guide to ShrubsShrubs provide the bones of the landscape. They are versatile, useful, and beautiful. They mark boundaries, create barriers, deter animals, frame views, and block eyesores. Shrubs can promote privacy, offer a welcome to guests, or act as a background in a border. As ground covers, they can control erosion or act as an attractive, low-maintenance alternative to lawns. In their all-season versatility, they provide flowers and fragrance, colorful foliage, berries for the birds, and green color in winter. Because shrubs are not throwaway plants, it's all the more important to buy the right shrub for the right place. Too many gardeners have had the experience of putting in a neat little shrub and watching it grow to be a window-blocking monster. With this expert guide, readers will buy the right shrub in the first place and learn how to keep it looking its best. |
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Acid soil Average soil Tolerates azaleas Barberry beneath berry Blooms in spring Blooms in summer branches Calyx capsule China color Corolla corymbs Cotoneaster cultivar cultivated cymes deciduous deciduous shrubs dense Description Leaves alternate Description Leaves opposite easy to grow evergreen evergreen shrub fall Flower clusters Flowers Flowers small Flowers white foliage Forsythia Fruit red full sun garden soil genus green grown growth hairy hedge Holly Hydrangea Ilex Japanese japonica Johnswort leaf axils leaflets Leaves elliptic Leaves ovalish Lilac lobes long Blooms marginal teeth moist panicles partial shade petals pink Plant height Propagate by cuttings Propagate by seeds prune purple racemes Rhododendron roots sepals shrub shrub or small small tree softwood cuttings soil Tolerates shade species Spirea spring Average soil spring Zone stalked Stamens stems subshrubs summer Zone Tolerates dry soil toothed transplant twigs usually Viburnum wide Blooms winter Winter Hazel Witch Hazel Zone 5 Average Zone 9