Type: Emerald (Arandano Emerald, Vaccinium 'Emerald')
Though the tag said full sun (6+ full hours) I put them in containers in partial shade, under the canopy of a mesquite tree. They like to be mulched and watered thoroughly so I actually set the containers in a shallow basin of water on kept it full at all times. It yielded beautiful large fruit! Has a cold hardiness of 10 to 0 degrees F.
Wonderful addition to the southwest garden! Ours is planted under a mesquite tree with some spruce cone cholla and it is very low maintenance. It comes back every year and blooms in late summer/early fall in our area near Tucson.
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Vitex Negundo Incisa. Explorer, Frank N Meyer found Vitex Negundo in Shantung, China. Mr. Meyer describes Vitex Negundo as "a sage which may prove to be a good plant for the arid Southwestern states. It is able to resist alkali remarkably well. The Chinese use it for basketry manufacture, taking the annual shoots for this purpose. It has pretty blue flowers and is diligently visited by all kinds of bees, and as such it might be grown in gardens as a semi-ornamental shrub. It grows, when left alone, up to 20 feet tall."
H.B. Parks, in a letter to Frank C. Pellett, author of American Honey Plants, stated that it "makes a wonderful growth and that it is a most remarkable honey plant" (observations made in Texas). However, Vitex agnus-castus, though it blooms profusely, is not much value to bees. So when it is stated that Vitex agnus is an improved selection of Vitex Negundo is it really? Vitex agnus has been "improved" for larger, showier flowers and there is no doubt that bees do still visit those flowers however their nectar yield is not the same had it been Vitex Negundo. |
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