|

|
|
KATHY
ANN (top) -- The Mississippi Medallion award
winning Kathy Ann holly is like an Olympic champion
of berry production.
POSSUM
HAW (below) -- For some of the best winter color,
plant possum haw hollies for literally thousands of
berries. They are easy to grow and have very few
pests.
|
|

|
|

|
Native hollies
excel
in most landscapes
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Farmers
want to get rid of them and landscapers want to plant them,
but two native hollies are at the top of my list of best
shrubs or small trees we can grow in Mississippi.
Yaupon
hollies are native throughout the Southeast. They are great
shrubs for sunny beds and yet look good in shade. They
tolerate clays, sand and everything in between.
Those
of you who cringe at the mention of hollies because of
thorny leaves can rest assured that the yaupon will cause
you no harm.
This
holly is like many others in that there are male and female
plants. If you want the bright red, Christmas-type hollies
for decorating, then you need female plants. A check at your
favorite nursery right now will probably show an abundance
of berries on the female plants. You may want to plant about
one male plant for every 20 females. You don't have to plant
them immediately adjacent to the females.
If you
want even more berries, then ask your nursery owner to get
selections like Jewel, Pride of Houston, Ochra Coke or the
Mississippi Medallion award winning Kathy Ann. These are
like the Olympic champions of berry producing. There are
also weeping yaupons and yellow fruited
varieties.
Dwarf
varieties have become landscape standards. Look for
varieties like Nana, Schellings, Stokes and Bordeaux with
its crimson leaves on the new growth.
The
other holly that is an award winner in my book is the possum
haw. It gives us some of our best winter color by being
literally covered with berries. The possum haw holly
definitely falls into the category of being the most admired
in the field and overlooked at the nursery.
If this
native to Mississippi always catches your eye during the
winter months and everyone likes it, why do we pass it by?
Its botanical name might give a clue. It is known as Ilex
decidua or deciduous holly as it loses its leaves. But the
branches hold a bounty of bright red to orange berries that
stay around all winter providing color and providing food
for the birds.
Possum
haws are easy to grow, and nurseries have them, so let's get
after it. Choose female plants to assure berry production.
Superior cultivars are Warren's Red, Pocahontas and Sentry.
The berries on these are suggested to be either more
prolific or larger than the native in the woods
variety.
Regardless
of the one you choose, plant in sun to partial sun and in
the same places you might plant a crape myrtle. Use them to
frame entryways for special accents or along driveways and
around the patio. Anywhere the landscape looks drab in the
winter is a great place for the possum haw holly to
brighten.
It has
few pests. One well-known horticulturist said you could
garden for 12 lifetimes and never see an insect or disease
bothering the plant. In some years we may have our berries
stripped by a waxwing, bobwhite quail or one of seven other
species, but those are the kinds of invaders we are happy to
see. As the name suggests, possums do find the berries a
treat as well.
These
native hollies do not like to dry out. They are at home in
moist areas. If you have an abundance of berries, they can
be lost if plants dry out. Fertilize your hollies in April
and August.
This
winter and spring when you are at your garden center
choosing new trees or shrubs, the possum haw and yaupon
hollies are two of the finest. Don't overlook
them.
-30-
Released:
Jan. 20, 2003
Contact: Norman
Winter,
(601) 857-2284
Editor's
Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns
are within one month of their release. Editors should
examine older columns carefully for any information that
could be time sensitive.
Publications may download photographs at 200 dpi:
Top
| Middle
| Bottom
|