Early summer creamy white, flat topped florets sit atop a beautiful vase shaped form. After the blooms, you’ll love all this jazz with blue-black berries followed by a wild show of yellow, orange, burgundy and scarlet foliage in autumn. Great food source for birds! Moderate to fast growing for diverse landscape uses. Native species, so requires minimal to no special care to flourish.
An outstanding native shrub that supports wildlife in oh so many ways! Upright and strong growing when young, this plant broadens with age and is covered with shiny foliage. Flattened heads of small white flowers cover the plant in late May followed by a show of blue to black berries in late summer and fall. Reddish fall foliage color is showy.
Space-saving dwarf viburnum! An exceptional dwarf viburnum that is a puffball of creamy white, fragrant flowers in late spring. Handsome, glossy foliage gives this shrub a sophisticated presence in the garden even when it is not in bloom.
Clusters of white flowers are followed by colorful summer fruit, that change from shining pink to red, then becomes blue in late summer before turning black. Sometimes all of these colors are present in the same fruiting cluster. The berries are persistent and add winter interest before the birds gobble them up. The fall foliage is always colorful in shades orange, red and purple. For best cross-pollination and subsequent fruit display, plant shrubs in groups rather than as single specimens. This variety is useful as a pollinator for Viburnum ‘Winterthur’.
Sweetly scented flowers are extremely fragrant and will fill the air with the sweet-spice scent in early spring. Sugar n’ Spice is slow-growing and forms a nice rounded shrub with pleasing red fall color. Easy to grow with great landscape rewards! The fragrant flowers of Sugar n’ Spice® Koreanspice Viburnum attract birds, butterflies, and other pollinators in spring.
With its fragrant spring blooms and attractive habit, this compact Korean Spice viburnum is a great addition to gardens. Stronger growing than other compact varieties, it’s a great choice for smaller landscapes, providing all of the spicy, intoxicating spring fragrance of traditional Koreanspice viburnum in a petite package.
Heavenly flower fragrance makes this variety one of the most sought after viburnums. Bunches of deep pink buds open to mini-snowballs of creamy white flowers in late April. Leathery, deep green foliage turns wine-red in autumn. A real landscape gem.
Easy growing to a fault, this native to woodland edges is one of the unsung heroes of the native landscape providing nectar for native insects and delectable fruit for native songbirds. Smaller growing than many of the native Viburnums, Mapleleaf Viburnum grows upright but suckers freely, lending itself to naturalizing in semi-shaded areas. Trident, maple-like foliage emerges in spring and forms the backdrop for 3″ wide flat cymes of small white flowers that are held above the foliage in late May and June for all those nectar seeking spring butterflies to easily find. A summer progresses, these spent cymes turn to heads of fruit which turn black then red as summer comes to a close providing a favorite snack for birds along with great nesting cover. Plant it in groups then stand back and watch how much your birds and butterflies will thank you!
White flowers appear in April and May, producing loads of bright red fruit, tightly packed into showy clusters in late summer and fall. This compact, well-branched hybrid is impressive yet easy to grow, providing striking fall and winter color.