Birds & Blooms

Top 10 Winter Dazzlers

For those of you out there who love winter, here are the most dazzling of winter plants. Remember, your garden can still look great and have a few hints of color even during those dreary, cold months.

For those of you out there who love winter, here are the most dazzling of winter plants. Remember, your garden can still look great and have a few hints of color even during those dreary, cold months.

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Photo: RDA GID

Camellia

While most garden plants spend winter taking a well-earned rest, camellias are just getting warmed up. These popular evergreens flower in the fall, winter, or early spring. They are great for landscaping and produce beautiful rose-shaped blooms.

Camellias have been cultivated for years in the Far East, their native region. Today, there are over 250 species and more than 3,000 varieties.


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Photo: RDA GID

Firethorn

Looking for autumn beauty in your backyard beyond the pumpkins, cornstalks, and chrysanthemums surrounding your doorstep? The firethorn is right for you. While it has beautiful white flower clusters in spring and attractive glossy-green foliage the rest of the year, it's those compact bunches of pea-size red, orange or yellow berries that always get all the attention. These brilliant berries carry on long after the last of autumn's leaves have dropped.


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Photo: RDA GID

Harry Lauder's walking stick

This unique shrub does have flowers in spring, but that's not why gardeners plant it. The twists and turns of this plant's branches make it a great choice to liven up winter landscapes.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Heather

While heather is a well-celebrated plant throughout Europe, it's often forgotten in this country. It's time for that to change, though. This versatile flower boasts color year-round. With beautiful flowers in summer and autumn to gorgeous foliage in winter, this beauty is sure to make a strong impact in your garden.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Hellebore

No winter garden is complete without hellebore's lovely cup-shaped blooms. It'll be difficult to choose just one variety of this distinctive flower. But no matter the kind and color, each offers beautiful evergreen foliage. You're sure to love hellebore so much, you'll wish it bloomed year-round.


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Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Holly

You'll have especially happy holly-days when colorful holly takes center stage in your yard. Whether holly is planted for its beautiful foliage, bright berries or both, gardeners have quite a selection of evergreen and deciduous species to choose from. There are at least 400 of them that range in size from small bushes to 80-foot trees. Ask your local nursery or garden center for the variety that best suits your climate...and make every day a holly-day.


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Photo: Erv Evans, NC State University

Paperbark maple

This tree's bronze ornamental bark takes first place every time. Coppery curls peel off all over - from the multiple trunks to even the smallest branches. Not to be outdone, the summer green leaves turn a warm shade of cinnamon in fall. Be sure to water well during hot summers to protect foliage from scorching.

Though it's extremely slow-growing, plan well to give this winter wonder prominent placement for adequate attention.


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Photo: Erv Evans, NC State University

Paper birch

Though attractive year-round, this tree is at its peak during cool weather. The leaves turn a magnificent yellow in autumn, and the white bark looks lovely against a winter backdrop of evergreens. Homeowners prize it for its "northwoods look," and some make it a focal point in their Christmas displays, shining a spotlight on the distinctive peeling bark.


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Photo: RDA GID

Red twig dogwood

Red twig dogwood, also known as Tatarian dogwood, is a longtime favorite. It has unique red stems that make a nice backdrop to overwintering perennials or an accent plant with evergreens.

Regular pruning keeps the color vibrant year-round (though in spring and summer, the leaves disguise it). Simply remove older brown stems at ground level in late winter. This encourages new growth, which is the most vivid.


plant database
Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Winterberry

Few deciduous shrubs garner winter interest like winterberry. Unlike its cousin, holly, winterberry drops its leaves in fall, so nothing detracts from the showy brilliance of the red berries. Winterberry is often regarded as a must for cold-weather landscaping, and it's easy to see why. You'll love the colorful fruit, and the birds will love you for it.