Daphne retusa: lustrous and lusty!

Submitted by Kelaidis on

OK, the flower is white and the bush is bushy. But for those of us who live in a windswept, godawful Great Plains where the wind whistles and only a few, threadbare strands of barbed wire separate us from the Arctic blasts (I did not make this up, btw), the seemingly subtropical luster of evergreen leaves on this munchkin are as evocative of warmth as Gardenias in Grenada.

I can't resist showing off my champion plant of this, perched on top of my very exposed rock gardeen where it seems to do very well. Alas! Each fruit has a single seed--and it takes forever to gather a handful of the plump berries. So I never have quite enough seed to do the trick.

Although one local nurseryman has had good luck with cuttings...I have grown a half dozen "retusa" and "tangutica" over the years--each different a bit from one another, and yet all with a close family resemlance. All seem to be tough as nails and worth a spot in the large rock garden.

Comments


Submitted by Boland on Fri, 02/19/2010 - 17:37

I have what I got as a retusa but I think it may be tangutica...does very well here but my plant is now too leggy and needs to be re-propagated.


Submitted by Kelaidis on Sat, 02/20/2010 - 10:33

Looks just like what I grow as D. retusa: my original D. tangutica which lasted almost 25 years and got almost 4' tall came from Siskiyou Rare Plant Nursery and had somewhat narrower, more pointy leaves. I miss it very much: maybe they still have some tucked away somewhere. My "retusas" tend to have thicker, more oval and darker leaves just like what your's shows...I guess they are all closely allied (tangutica presumably being a more northerly outlier).


Submitted by Boland on Sun, 02/21/2010 - 15:31

Well maybe I'll have to change my label back to retusa..the fact that the more 'tender' of the two is doing so well fills me with some pride that I'm successful with it in Newfoundland.


Submitted by Michael J Campbell on Wed, 04/06/2011 - 11:04

A few of mine starting to flower.

Daphne Kilmeston beauty
Daphne  Napollitana stasek
Daphne  x Mauerbachii Perfume of Spring
Daphne Collina
Daphne Mantensiana Audrey Vokins.
Daphne Napolitana Enigma
Daphne petraea Lydora?
Daphne Rollsdorfii wilhelm Schacht
Daphne Rosy Wave.
Daphne x susannae Cheriton


Submitted by Michael J Campbell on Wed, 04/06/2011 - 12:24

About 200 in pots and a few in the garden. Most of them have scent which is overpowering in the greenhouse when a lot of them are in bloom at the same time.


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Wed, 05/18/2011 - 06:57

I have a friend who probably grows well over 100 Daphnes - he is on very good terms with Robin White! My two all time favourites are retusa and odora, both of which make superlative garden plants, and odora is, I think, the best scented of all the genus. I noticed that in Robin's book it was this species that first got him hooked. (Mind you he is a bit good at growing all sorts of other plants too!).

Our specimens of bholua have suffered badly following the long cold and snowy weather before Christmas. I am hoping that if I cut them down they may regenerate from the base or the roots because they do form shoots some way from the main stem and i imagine root cuttings could be a way of propagating them. Presumably they are too tender for a lot of the States?


Submitted by Hoy on Wed, 05/18/2011 - 23:40

Tim wrote:

I have a friend who probably grows well over 100 Daphnes - he is on very good terms with Robin White! My two all time favourites are retusa and odora, both of which make superlative garden plants, and odora is, I think, the best scented of all the genus. I noticed that in Robin's book it was this species that first got him hooked. (Mind you he is a bit good at growing all sorts of other plants too!).

Our specimens of bholua have suffered badly following the long cold and snowy weather before Christmas. I am hoping that if I cut them down they may regenerate from the base or the roots because they do form shoots some way from the main stem and i imagine root cuttings could be a way of propagating them. Presumably they are too tender for a lot of the States?

My two forms of bholua froze to death last winter - and it was the root that died, not the stem or leaves which seemed to be quite healthy when the spring arrived.