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Kerria Question
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Posted by chezmoose z4 MI (My Page) on Mon, Jun 13, 05 at 20:31
| My mother (in Zone 5, MI) has two Japanese Kerria shrubs that die back to the ground each winter. They come up from the ground in the spring, but do not bloom. Do they only bloom on old wood?
I had two at my previous house in Z4 and they were beautiful, which is why she chose the Kerria. Mine were located on the east side of the house, so were protected from most of the winter winds. Hers are more in an open but shady location. Does she need to protect them somehow in the winter?
Any advice will be appreciated. |
Follow-Up Postings:
RE: Kerria Question
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| Kerria do bloom on old wood, so dying back to the ground is definitely a problem. Mine are along a windy drive in full sun with no die back and I've seen them blooming profusely in Upper MI -- could she have a different cultivar that is less cold tolerant? Winter protection is worth a try. |
RE: Kerria Question
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| I have the double flowered kerria. Because of its green stems, it is a great favorite of rabbits, mice, deer, and anything else that browses during the winter or early spring. I go to great lengths to protect it (not from the winter, only the creatures), using netting, wire cages, etc.), and still I get about 60% or more eaten off, which means very few blossoms later on. I propagated a kerria for my sister (zone 2/3) who has no rabbit/browsing problems, and hers is beautiful, full, and covered with flowers year after year, so I'm thinking the cold may not be the issue for you. Good luck! Kate Just a thought, but what you think is winter die back may be hungry winter browsers instead. |
RE: Kerria Question
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| I had the double flowering Kerria and last year it bloomed beautifully. This spring it was nothing but brown dead branches with new growth from the bottom. It is now history as I got tired of it taking over its allocated spot, new shoots just seem to pop up and the fact that in the 10 years I've had, it flower exactly twice. I don't feel they are really hardy in my zone. |
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