some garden ceanothus

ceanothus-tuxedo

On my last nurs­ery trip I noticed a new hor­ti­cul­tural cean­othus selec­tion that I hadn’t encoun­tered before. Cean­othus Tuxedo is strik­ing because of its brown-black foliage, a leaf color I’ve never seen before on a cean­othus. In this photo you can see its large, dark foliage con­trasted against the bright medium green of a more typ­i­cal ceanothus.

Tuxedo arose as a muta­tion on a branch of Cean­othus Autum­nal Blue, a hybrid of C. thyr­si­florus and C. ×delil­ianus (which is itself a hybrid of a hardy decid­u­ous species with a more ten­der ever­green one). Autum­nal Blue isn’t a plant that’s a typ­i­cal con­stituent of Cal­i­for­nia native gar­dens, instead being an old British hybrid that was bred for its har­di­ness. Also unlike its purely Cal­i­for­nia brethren, it blooms in sum­mer or fall, not in the spring.

The new Tuxedo selec­tion is reput­edly drought-tolerant. Look­ing at its ances­try, how­ever, it’s clear it will require some sup­ple­men­tal sum­mer water in dry cli­mates. There’s no ques­tion that it appre­ci­ates good drainage. Mature height is listed as at least six feet high and across.

ceanothus-thyrsiflorus-el-dorado

Next to Tuxedo in the nurs­ery were a cou­ple var­ie­gated cean­othus. C. thyr­si­florus ‘El Dorado’ fea­tures small light green/dark green leaves on a large shrub. In sum­mer the leaves will show more con­trast, with the light green turn­ing more of a yel­low color.

ceanothus-griseus-horizontalis-diamond-heights

If you want yellow-and-green leaves in a more spread­ing cean­othus, there’s C. griseus hor­i­zon­talis ‘Dia­mond Heights.’ (Sorry for the fuzzy photo…) You could think of it as a var­ie­gated ver­sion of a well known ground­cover cean­othus like ‘Yan­kee Point.’

Both of the above could be con­sid­ered low-water (not no-water) plants for a garden.

Cal­i­for­nia native plant purists might think twice before plant­ing any of these selec­tions. They scream that they’re gar­den plants and not vis­i­tors from the wilds. But these cean­othus do give you more options if you’d still like your plants to have a bit of laid back Cal­i­for­nia atti­tude to them.

ceanothus-leucodermis-flowers-and-stems

ceanothus-leucodermis-stems

The last cean­othus I want to share is a wild plant, taken about ten days ago just out­side the Santa Ysabel Open Space Pre­serve in the San Diego County foothills. Chap­ar­ral whitethorn (C. leu­co­der­mis) has got to be one of the most unique of the genus, com­bin­ing fluffy, vaporous blue-tinged white flow­ers with a plant that has bark as white as an aspen. It’s an amaz­ing effect.

But unfor­tu­nately the plant appears to be sin­gu­larly dif­fi­cult to grow in any­thing but the per­fect gar­den spot. Tak­ing up the slack is a garden-friendly hybrid, L.T. Blue (L.T. equals leu­co­der­mis x thyr­si­florus), which pre­serves the white bark color and blue (if not misty blue) flow­ers of leu­co­der­mis in com­bi­na­tion with the much more garden-tolerant C. thyr­si­florus. Las Pil­i­tas car­ries it, and this last photo is from their site.


May 04 2009 05:55 am | Categories: gardening | Tags:

10 Responses to “some garden ceanothus”

  1. Jenny on 04 May 2009 at 5:52 pm #

    Very jeal­ous. Cean­othus typ­i­cally hate lots of water and humid­ity. So, as you can imag­ine, dis­likes the south intensely. I will admire from a far.

    Although, I have mas­tered grow­ing agas­tache with­out drown­ing them. Maybe one day…

  2. Town Mouse on 04 May 2009 at 7:14 pm #

    The great thing about Dia­mond Heights is that it can tol­er­ate part shade (mine gets maybe 4 hours of morn­ing sun, then a bit here and there dur­ing the day through the red­woods. And with that bril­liant colour, it really lights up the shade. I have it in a pot, and it’s worked out quite well.

  3. lostlandscape on 04 May 2009 at 7:52 pm #

    Jenny, I think the agas­tache is an accom­plish­ment where you are, even if cean­othus might elude you. Uh oh. Sounds like a chal­lenge you can’t refuse.

    Town Mouse, it sounds like you’ve got a per­fect spot for it–something that’s both to its lik­ing and where it looks great. I’ll have to admit to being tempted by the Tuxedo, and won’t be sur­prised if it ends up in the yard in the next cou­ple of weeks–I’ve got a spot for a plant with dark foliage.

  4. Pomona Belvedere on 05 May 2009 at 11:16 am #

    I’m always pleased and amazed by our many and seem­ingly constantly-hybridizing local cean­othus, but I’m no purist: ‘Tuxedo’ and the oth­ers look great to me, and I like the idea of a summer-flowering cean­othus. Very infor­ma­tive post, thanks.

  5. lostlandscape on 05 May 2009 at 5:57 pm #

    Pomona, thank you. Like you I’m always amazed by what two plants can pro­duce when they hybridize, and then add some cool muta­tions on top of the rich gene pool–as with Tuxedo.

  6. [ Lost in the Landscape ] » screening with wood, screening with plants on 30 May 2009 at 6:01 am #

    […] their place is this new Cean­othus ‘Tuxedo.’ I’d done a post on some gar­den cean­othus not long ago, and I couldn’t stop think­ing about the near-black foliage of this vari­ety. With […]

  7. out of doors on 22 Jul 2009 at 8:15 am #

    The protests against gar­den plants by native plant peo­ple always inter­est me, in that it takes a very grey area and col­ors every­thing black and white. It’s a gar­den plant because it was selected by a nurs­ery? So were most of the so-called species plants avail­able for pur­chase. Unless you do a restora­tion project, col­lect­ing seed from the imme­di­ate wild­lands and rais­ing it to plant out, you’re plant­ing gar­den plants. And do native plant purists really want the gen­eral pub­lic har­vest­ing remain­ing native populations?

  8. [ Lost in the Landscape ] » looking like spring again on 03 Nov 2009 at 6:30 am #

    […] Another sea­son­ally con­fused plant is this ground­cover cean­othus. I’m only slowly now com­ing around to this genus. Ground­cover ver­sions like you see in the Burger King park­ing lot (think C. griseus ‘Yan­kee Point’) were all I saw for decades, but I’ve been try­ing to pay more atten­tion to what other cean­othus have to offer. This one, unfor­tu­nately, is one of the Burger King-type vari­eties: low, flat, green all year on a low-to-moderate amount of water. It’s so inert and emphat­i­cally green it reminds me of plas­tic. I may never come to love this type, but for­tu­nately there are other plants in the genus that do very dif­fer­ent things. […]

  9. PatFitzGerald on 30 Nov 2009 at 1:18 pm #

    I am glad to see my Cean­othus Tuxedo shared with all you folk in Cal­i­for­nia. I really hope it does well there and I know its not pure pure native but it is all Amer­i­can native in East meets west style. For what its worth it seems to thrive much bet­ter in your glo­rius Cal­i­for­nia sun than it does under our grey clouded land here. It grows very well here but the colour depth it reaches in Cal­i­for­nia tells me its hap­pi­est there.
    I hope it adds to your gar­den tapes­try.
    Thank you for high­light­ing this plant.

    Pat FitzGer­ald.

  10. News from www.HortiTrends.com – Pat Fitzgerald successfully using social media tools to promote MyPlant range and FitzGerald Nurseries at home and abroad « HorticultureTrends's Blog on 01 Jun 2010 at 10:03 am #

    […] http://www.soenyun.com/Blog/2009/05/04/some-garden-ceanothus/ […]

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