Viburnum Prunifolium - The Blackhaw Viburnum
The Blackhaw viburnum is known as Viburnum Prunifolium to be
exact. This plant will be adaptable to many soil types; shaded
or sunny, and can do well in dry soils. This article give a
brief introduction to this interesting landscape plant. With its
rounded, stiffly branched habit the Blackhaw Viburnum reminds
you of a Hawthorn. It is a very easy plant to grow. It can be
purchased as a seedling, a rooted cutting, a potted starter
plant in qt. pots, to 5 gal. pots, and B&B field dug plants. In
your landscape it can be a small tree because plants attains a
height of 12 to 14 feet. The Blachhaw Viburnum has dark green,
glossy, leathery leaves turn a dark reddish to purple in the
fall. It is an attractive leaf. This viburnum has creamy white
flowers are borne in flat-topped flower clusters during May. The
fruit turns blue-black at maturity. The fruit of this viburnum,
which is sweet and edible, is nearly half an inch long, bluish
black, covered with a bloom, and ripens in early autumn. It
contains a small and somewhat flattened stone. The mature fruit
makes good preserves. It is ripe when it turns black. The leaves
are small enough that they don't pose a raking and cleaning
problem. Birds frequent this shrub for feed and shelter. Plants
are native and tolerate shade but flower and fruit best in full
sun. Habitat and range: The blackhaw viburnum occurs in dry
woods and thickets and on rocky hillsides from Connecticut to
Florida and west to Michigan and Texas, but is mostly found in
the South. I have never seen a native Blackhaw Viburnum in our
county (Bucks County, Pa. ) that occured naturally. It will
still thrive in the soils around Solebury Pa. On our plant
durability list, we rate this a 9 for ease of transplanting and
site adaptability. There are also few serious pests that
homeowners need to concern themselves with. We have many deer on
our nursery and we have not seen much deer damage to this plant
by deer feeding on this plant. You can call us or visit our web
site for more information on other Viburnums. See
http://www.zone5trees.com http://www.seedlingsrus.com and
http://www.highlandhillfarm.com