Chardonney
Pearls is deutzia that electrifies
By Norman Winter
MSU Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension Center
Just
when you think you’ve seen everything in the gardening world,
up pops a new deutzia. Your grandmother may have had an old white
variety that bloomed every spring. The new Chardonney Pearls will
change everything you ever thought about deutzia.
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Chardonney
Pearls deutzia, Sanguna Midnight Blue Petunia and
Coffee Twist sedge combine wonderfully in a container
that would be a hit on any porch, patio or deck. |
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Let’s look back at Grandma’s deutzia for an adequate comparison.
This heirloom plant commonly called Fuzzy Deutzia is known botanically as Deutzia
scabra. Grandma would probably have told you it was native, but in reality it
is from Japan and China. What Grandma more than likely didn’t
know was that besides the white selection, there were also double pink
varieties and even some with hints of purple.
Lately,
deutzia has been as hard to find as a four-leaf clover. I suspect
that is because deciduous shrubs have fallen out of favor. Most of
us think that every perennial has to bloom like New Gold lantana and
every shrub must bloom and be evergreen.
Thanks
to some innovation in both plants and marketing, Proven Winners is
helping bring back a real enjoyment in gardening by introducing a
Flowering Shrub collection. In this collection we find Chardonney
Pearls, a variety of Deutzia gracilis called slender deutzia.
This
species is from Japan and grows 6 feet tall. Chardonney Pearls should
be somewhat shorter, between 3 and 4 feet tall. The foliage has an
interesting, season-long lime-yellow color. In the spring, pearl-like
buds open into glistening, fragrant, white blossoms.
I
suspect grandma’s deutzia went unnoticed after its spring bloom,
but Chardonney Pearls will be just beginning. Placed as a center plant
in a large mixed container or grown as a specimen near the front door,
it can really add sizzle to the landscape. Choose attractive companion
plants, such as blue or purple flowers, to accompany this jewel. Look
for a new petunia series called Sanguna next year. Together, the Sanguna
Midnight Blue and Chardonney Pearls absolutely will stop traffic.
Proven
Winners is promoting these plants for both mixed containers and the
landscape. Other outstanding choices in the collection are Black
Beauty elder or Sambucus, with dark purple-black foliage and pink,
lemon-scented flowers.
Two
others I am excited about are hollies we call winterberry or Ilex
verticillata. Berry Nice, which has been out a while but hard to find,
and Berry Heavy both will excel in the South and prove to be a delight
to feasting birds. They will make great cuts for the holiday season.
Talk
to local garden center and see if they will get in some of these
great new plants. Plant some this season and one day your grandchildren
may talk about your old-fashioned Chardonney Pearls deutzia.
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Released:
November 23, 2005
Contact: Norman
Winter,
(601) 857-2284
Editor's
Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns
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