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gregejohnson

New englanders who are growing Southern Magnolias

gregejohnson
13 years ago

I'm from Western York County in Maine and I've been enamored with these trees since a high school trip to NC. After a lot of research I planted one. This will be it's first winter. It took the heat of summer surprisingly well for a freshly planted tree (here it got to 100 or more several times this summer with very little for rain. I'm sure a ton of you know about the hardier cultivars like BBB and 24 below. I'm wondering how many people in New England have had success with their southern Magnolias?

Comments (27)

  • prairiemoon2 z6b MA
    13 years ago

    greg, I am curious how you purchased one in Maine, they didn't have it at your local nursery did they? I am considering buying a BBB and looking for a good source. Good luck with your first winter!

  • rockman50
    13 years ago

    Oh..Prairie Moon: I bought my BBB at Sylvan Nursery in Westport, MA (just a few miles from me). They usually stock the BBB in spring. Also, Haskell's in New Bedford often has the Edith Bogue variety.

  • diggingthedirt
    13 years ago

    Rockman, I love reading your somewhat self-deprecating posts contrasted so sharply by the photos of your lovely garden. Your BBB is particularly nice!

    Gregejohnson, there have been several threads on this topic, but, sadly, many of the people who posted to those threads are no longer active on this forum for one reason or another. If you search the NE forum for southern magnolia, you're sure to find several discussions of the different varieties of southern magnolia in different locations around New England.

  • prairiemoon2 z6b MA
    13 years ago

    Rockman, thanks very much, sounds like the place to go. I don't think I've been to Sylvan, so that will be a nice trip to make. Spring might be better for planting one any way, I suppose.

  • Penelope
    13 years ago

    I planted a BBB last summer, mail ordered from Forest Farm, for my yard just northwest of Boston. I call it my folly! It arrived fairly tall but very sparsely leafed. It didn't put on much growth all summer last year, but did survive this winter. This year it's put on just a little growth, but still needs to be staked or that long mostly naked stem just flops. I drool over the pictures of Rockman's specimen! I tell people I'm hopeful but realistic, and won't be at all surprised if it doesn't make it. I've got it planted fairly close to the south wall of my house.

    There's an espaliered version against an outside wall at Tower Hill Botanic Garden near Worcester, I believe the Edith Bogue variety.

    Rockman's advice is good, and I'm going to try to use Wilt-Pruf this winter not only on the magnolia but on other broad-leafed evergreen shrubs which suffer from winter burn like leucothoe, rhododendrons, kalmias, etc. Another technique which might be worth trying is fencing the shrub with chicken wire or some other material and filling it loosely with leaves, at least for the first few years.

    Here's something funny: we visited friends in Richmond, VA, including a master gardener. I was raving about my love for the southern magnolias but she couldn't be bothered, she thought they were dirty and annoying trees dropping something every season--sounds like my oaks! I don't think I'd care, they're so gorgeous it's worth it, but I guess you never appreciate what you have as much as what's just out of reach.

  • prairiemoon2 z6b MA
    13 years ago

    I went to the Sylvan website and noticed that they have the BBB designated as zone 6b. I'm not sure I want to fight with the zone. I don't really have a 'sheltered' position on my property and I tried a holly that was on the edge of my zone last year and it didn't make it over the winter. I value ease and success too much to have my hopes dashed with a 'doomed from the start' experiment. [g] Especially with a tree. I'm looking at my second choice trees at the moment.
    I also drool looking at Rockman's photo. :-)

  • bill_ri_z6b
    13 years ago

    I have a BBB but it is only in its second season, so it has survived one winter with absolutely no problems. It was on the west side of the house and I am on a hill, so it got some pretty strong winter winds, as well as full sun. But I also had to have it moved in July because of a new patio and wall construction. It's been well watered and is doing fine, although it did not bloom this summer and I notice the leaves are a little smaller than last year. But otherwise very doing very well. Of course, it's too soon to say it's "hardy" here in my zone 6b garden. The nursery that sold it (as well as the grower's tag) said zone 5b, where they are located north of here.

  • rockman50
    13 years ago

    That was an interesting comment by the gardener from VA. Now that my original "shrub" has grown up to be a "tree", the amount of leaf litter is actually quite high. And the old inside leaves drop all summer long. So, if you like a tidy garden, you will be constantly raking up big dead stiff leaves. Even the flowers drop a huge amount of debris! Nothing about this tree is subtle. Mine seems to love its location and it pushes a good 1 to almost 2 feet of new growth each year. I had to give it some TLC in its early years (some pampering after a few of those brutal winters 5-6 years ago). And, the horror when I awoke one morning in early December, 2003 when 17 inches of very heavy wet snow collapsed the entire tree to the ground. It was gone! But it popped right back up in a few days, and the rest is history. After that, I started pruning, pruning, pruning. Now I don't have to make one of those unpleasant 2 AM trips into the yard during blizzards to shake off excess snow.

  • prairiemoon2 z6b MA
    13 years ago

    Bill, your post made me curious and I googled the BBB today and as usual found recommendations for hardiness from only to zone 7a, to 5b. So, I thought IÂm really not adverse to experiments and have done some of that along the way. I was considering buying a large BBB and expecting that to be an expensive proposition, I wouldnÂt want to experiment, but, I do see it available as a smaller version, such as what lovesummer did. That might actually be a fun experiment. I do think IÂll wait for spring to try it though.

    lovesummer, that is an idea about the chicken wire and leaves too. IÂve done that with hydrangeas that were not as hardy and it worked.

    I guess you did give it TLC rockman, 2am trips to shake off snow...lol. No different then night trips to collect some pest or other that is eating some favored plant, I guess. Your attention certainly paid off.

  • bill_ri_z6b
    13 years ago

    Ann,
    I paid $70 for a 5 foot tree. I thought that was a decent price. It was well branched and healthy.

    Bill

  • prairiemoon2 z6b MA
    13 years ago

    Thanks Bill, I'll keep that in mind in the spring when I go looking.

  • rockman50
    13 years ago

    Greg: Just following up on your original post last September. I am really curious to hear how your southern magnolia fared in western York County Maine this past winter!

  • scpearson
    13 years ago

    Hello,
    I bought a sprig from an unknown catalog many years ago (?15+). Didn't even think much about whether it would survive, but by its own determination, grew into a beautiful tree, much like the photo rockman posted. I am in zone 5 and it has survived some pretty harsh winters. It sure is pretty early in the Spring. Every year birds nest in it.
    Good luck with yours,
    Susan

  • rockman50
    13 years ago

    Dear Susan: Are you sure your tree is Magnolia Grandiflora (the evergreen southern magnolia)? Because you state "it sure is pretty early in the spring", it makes me think that your tree is probably one of the deciduous varieties that are quite common, and very hardy, here in southern New England (varieties like Star Magnolia, or Magnolia Soulangiana). These do bloom profusely in early spring. The southern magnolia is a broad-leaf evergreen tree that blooms late in spring and throughout summer. I would be curious to know if you do have a true southern magnolia.

  • scpearson
    13 years ago

    Hello Rockman,
    You may be right... it looks just like your photo but, may very well be Star Magnolia, as it does bloom in Spring. Right now it has what looks like big pussy willow buds on it.
    Susan

  • dcaradori_roadrunner_com
    13 years ago

    Sounds like a star mag., I have an edith bogue that was fine last winter, but took a beating this winter. About 50+% of its leaves r brown and she is starting to drop them. Although the branches appear to be ok...we had a couple days down close to -10. Maybe I should hav gone with a BBB?

  • bill_ri_z6b
    13 years ago

    Update on my BBB. It's looking OK. Not great but I think it will recover this year. Not only did I have to move it last summer because of the construction, but then we had a terrible winter, especially with the brutal, seemingly nonstop wind! But my camellias are totally untouched and loaded with fat buds. Go figure!

  • Penelope
    13 years ago

    I'll be going into the 3rd year with my BBB. It's surviving, but pretty sad looking. It held on to most of its leaves through the winter but they're a yellowish hue. I'll feed it and see what happens, but I'm not too optimistic.

  • leslie6ri
    13 years ago

    I've got a Bracken's Brown Beauty in Zone 6 that I've had for some years now. The first 3 years or so it got badly beaten up by our Winters, losing many of its leaves and the remaining ones were brown and burned. But now that it's well-established, Winter doesn't seem to faze it much. It's planted in an open wind-swept area in full sun and seems to be doing very well. I think these do take time to adapt.

    Leslie

  • bill_ri_z6b
    13 years ago

    Leslie,
    Thanks for the encouraging news! My poor tree has had to suffer being transplanted in July of last year (which was only its second year) and then go through our horrible winter with incredibly strong and unrelenting wind. But it's not looking all that bad considering. This afternoon I plan to loosen the soil just slightly (not too deep) and feed it.

  • bed24
    12 years ago

    Almost certainly the largest speciman in New England is at the Edward Gorey House in Yarmouth, MA. It was planted in the 1920s after being brought back from Mount Vernon, VA.

    Here is a link that might be useful:

  • rockman50
    12 years ago

    Thanks for that info bed24. But I am pretty sure there is a much bigger one in Cranston RI, not too far from interstate 95. I saw it about 5 years ago. It was not in a private yard. It was next to some type of office building I think. I remember it was large with a well formed trunk--the size of a good sized maple tree. I remember thinking that it was the most "southern looking" southern magnolia I have ever seen in these parts. It was in April when I saw it--and it looked in very good shape. And based on its size, it must have been quite old---seen pretty much anything the RI version of a New England winter can offer. Any RI folks know about the tree I am talking about???

  • Seth Tiernan
    2 years ago

    Ive been growing 3 Kay Parris Magnolias in North Providence, RI for 3 years. i ordered them from wilsonbros online nursury and they were smaller than anticipated, but they’ve been doing great!


  • Penelope
    2 years ago

    Is that the “hell strip” between sidewalk and street? That may end up being too small and you’ll have to do an awful lot of pruning. Or is yours a miniature variety?

  • Jurassic Park
    2 years ago
    last modified: 2 years ago

    This variety grows anywhere from 20-25 feet tall and about 10 feet in width, so a relative dwarf among M. grandiflora varieties but the space is absurdly small. I am not sure you realize how exuberantly a heathy M. grandifora grows if happy. Growth is also frequently, very low branching (as in down to the ground). They are also strongly surface rooting, and I don't see how the roots are going to grow without destroying your pavers. I definitely would transplant ASAP, this is a small one. small ones transplant quite well but larger ones resent being moved as may be damaged or killed in the process. I have had them pop up from cones on my property and have removed the small ones to containers for future planting, so it can definitely be done successfully. I have several cultivars of M. grandiflora; Edith Bogue, Victoria, Majestic Beauty, and Little Gem. Little Gem is probably the most dwarf but still too big for this strip, and it's also the LEAST cold hardy.

    This is Edith Bogue obscuring a three story home. I planted it from a two feet tree about 15 years ago.



  • Henry Z6(OH Zone 6b)
    3 months ago

    I know this thread is ancient, but there is a giant one in Rhode Island growing on Reservoir Ave right off of interstate 10.

    Here is a google maps screenshot