Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Wildflower Wednesday


The freeze that got the wisteria got the Piedmont and Florida azaleas too, but they were past their prime by then.

The azalea bed looks half empty now that I have moved the evergreen azaleas out. The deer kept chewing them down, and recent cold winters had taken a toll on the Encore azaleas. They had been whittled down to one or two tall slender stalks. With DH's help I moved them to the north and east of the vitex tree in the front yard. I hope they will thrive there and no longer clash with the native Piedmont azaleas, lol. (If you can still see the lonely sad branch of one of the Encores sticking out into the drive.)


Thankfully the deer almost always leave the native azaleas alone. I would legit cry if the deer ate those. Next February or March I plan on setting up a motion detection sprinkler in case the deer try them now that the evergreen azaleas have been moved. Plus, one of the neighbors sold their timber to a logging company so more deer have likely been pushed onto our property. Four of the azaleas are doing beautifully, but I have lost almost every other addition to that bed.

Piedmont azaleas




Butterflies love azaleas, and I often see the first swallowtails of the season on the flowers.



The white piedmont azalea has always performed the best.
It's big, full, sweetly fragrant and very beautiful.


There's a Piedmont azalea in the middle of the bed that has always struggled in comparison. It only produced a few small clusters of flowers this year, but they are very sweet and the plant is growing, albeit slowly, so I'll leave it where it is.









I will collect some seed from the azaleas this fall in the hopes of eventually getting more like them. In the meantime I plan to order a sweet azalea (Rhododendron arborescens), a Red Hills azalea (R. colemanii), and a couple of Piedmont azaleas for the lower part of the bed, nearest the ditch. Sweet azaleas grow tall, are very fragrant, and grow in swamps and by stream and river banks, so hopefully it will be happy next to the ditch. Red Hills azaleas can also grow tall, has pink, white or yellow flowers and according to Dirr, has a fragrance that can range from sweet to musky to lemony. When I get one I hope it's sweet or lemony.

I saw a beautiful cultivar of a piedmont azalea at the Coker Arboretum this past Wednesday: 'Camellia's Blush'. I love the soft pink color and it's more fragrant than my pink piedmont azaleas.



For the upper part of the bed I'd like to try an Alabama azalea and pinxterflower. They are found on rocky hillsides and dry woods. Alabama azaleas may have the best fragrance of all of the native azaleas, and that's saying something. It's very sweet and smells like vanilla or lemon, depending on the year. There's a treble of beautiful Alabama azaleas at the Coker Arboretum and one day I want an AL azalea like one of those. I had an AL azalea next to the house that performed beautifully for one year and then declined thereafter for no discernible reason. I hope my next attempt is more successful, as an AL is a very special plant.
AL azalea next to the house in 2011


AL azalea at Coker Arboretum April 2016



Today I am joining gail at clay and limestone for her wonderful meme Wildflower Wednesday.


17 comments:

  1. This was a nice post to read after visiting the National Arboretum! Your Piedmont Azaleas are very beautiful. I don't know enough about Azaleas to say which kind exactly were at the Azalea Collection, but I'd guess they were a mix of the native and exotic species. No doubt some hybrids as well. Is there an easy way to tell them apart?

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    Replies
    1. The native azaleas are deciduous and have small flowers that are often sweetly fragrant. The colors are softer than those of the Asian evergreen azaleas and many species grow taller too.

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  2. Beautiful Azaleas!
    I have problems with deer here, too. It seems like Pansies and Azaleas are their favorite foods!
    Happy Wildflower Wednesday!
    Lea

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  3. those delicate yellow markings make the white flowers sing

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  4. Your azaleas are so pretty. I'm sorry you lost some to deer.

    Keep enjoying and sharing all that beauty that surrounds you.

    Love & hugs ~ FlowerLady

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  5. Very pretty!
    Happy Wildflower Wednesday!
    Lea

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  6. very pretty! Do you ever notice any pollinators on the native azaleas?

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    Replies
    1. Yes, pollinators love the native azaleas! Bees, hummingbirds and butterflies all flock to the flowers.

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  7. Interesting. I've been thinking of adding some petite Azaleas to a particular spot in my garden. I'm not crazy about the brightly colored ones, but I like the white and pink ones you show here. :)

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    Replies
    1. Be sure to look at mature heights though! LOL There are short species/cultivars, but some get quite tall.

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    2. I think I've settled on a different shrub for that particular spot--Virginia Sweetspire 'Little Henry.' It will be a foundation planting with a sidewalk on one side and the house on the other in a very narrow strip. It's very shady, so I think Itea will be a better choice for the spot. But I love Azaleas in their natural habitat. :)

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  8. What lovely wildflowers to have! I can't lay claim to any wildflowers at all - even the California poppies haven't been able to get established on their own here.

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  9. You have some seriously gorgeous native azaleas! I can't wait until mine get that big. What a great idea for keeping deer away! I have a few azaleas from the Confederate series, which are nicely fragrant and attract butterflies, hummingbirds and clearwing moths.

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  10. Thanks for your help with ID of Lyreleaf Sage
    Have a great day!
    Lea

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  11. I'm sorry that cold winters damaged Mi azaleas. Those that you show are beautiful and I love them. We are only the beginning of flowering. Regards.

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  12. hola, me agrada tu blog y ver como tratas a tus plantas, azaleas y el bosque,,me gusta, felicidades, si no hay inconveniente, te sigo,,,saludos

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  13. Your azaleas are just gorgeous.The flowers make me think of butterflies.Perhaps that is why Swallowtails like them.

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