Showing posts with label Lonicera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lonicera. Show all posts

Monday, 18 March 2024

Lonicera gracilipes JP5573

Lonicera gracilipes
A relatively small pink-flowered winter flowering species from Japan. 
Lonicera gracilipes
The leaves are rounded and somewhat glaucous. 
Hardy and adaptable.
£16



Wednesday, 22 June 2022

Lonicera syringantha

Lonicera syringantha
A medium-sized shrubby species with heavily fragrant rosy pink trumpet-shaped flowers in spring. The foliage is neat and grey-green. Easy and adaptable – one of the best fragrant shrubs.
£16


Tuesday, 7 June 2016

New shrubby Lonicera

What a fascinating genus Lonicera is. Most people I guess think of the climbing honeysuckle but there are at least as many non-climbing shrubby species, and a very varied bunch they are too. Almost all are easy and hardy in a variety of situations.

Lonicera chaetocarpa
Lonicera chaetocarpa
An unusual and very un-honeysuckle-like non-climbing species with pairs of funnel-shaped pale yellow flowers in a large bristly papery pinkish or yellowish calyx, which persists around the orange berries. 
Lonicera chaetocarpa
The leaves are rich green and bristly. Very easy and hardy.
£16


Lonicera myrtillus
Lonicera mytilloides
A very different species with small rounded leaves and rosy white urn-shaped flowers - almost like some sort of ericaceous shrub (hence the name). Also makes red berries.
Lonicera myrtillus
Compact and easily pleased
£16


Lonicera alberti
A very distinctive low-growing species with narrow grey-green leaves and tubular scented mauve-pink flowers. Likes a sunny, well drained, open spot. No flowers yet - hence no picture
£16


Lonicera elisae
Lonicera elisae
A very beautiful late winter/early spring flowering species, producing clusters of dangling soft pink scented flowers, sometimes followed by orange berries. 
Lonicera elisae
The new foliage is tinted purple and turns purple again in autumn.
Sold out for now

Wednesday, 28 October 2009

Lonicera crassifolia


A lovely little evergreen creeping (not climbing) honeysuckle for ground cover or rockery. Possibly too vigorous for a trough but not rampageous. Just to give you a sense of the scale, that's an ordinary winter heather there at the top.
 Another view of the same plant with heathers and thymes
1L pots ~ £8