| Spirea
01
June 2005
What
have spiraea, apples, hawthorn, firethorn and
roses all got in common? Amazingly they are
all part of the Rocaceae family.
In the middle of the last century
these versatile, deciduous shrubs were to be
seen growing in every garden. They were easy
to propagate from cuttings, untroubled by pests
or disease and as hardy as hawthorn.
Best
known was the Bridal wreath, Spiraea arguta.
It forms a large, 7-8 ft high shrub and, during
May, covers its arched branches in pure white
flowers.
The variety S.japonica ‘Anthony
Waterer’ was also popular with its deep
pink flowers and green leaves that were sometimes
edged white. I never appreciated this plant
and its demise is not regretted.
Spiraeas love a sunny spot in
the garden preferring a well drained soil. Annual
spring feeding with a balanced fertilizer and
a mulch of well rotted, farmyard manure in autumn
will result in a good show of flowers.
Most species flower on growths
made the previous year and should be pruned
in early summer removing those stems that flowered.
Older plants can be thinned out removing a quarter
of the oldest branches as close to ground level
as possible. Spiraea douglasii flowers on the
new growths and should be pruned in spring and
fed with a balanced fertilizer to encourage
growth.
With the onset of the multi
coloured foliage varieties and dwarf shrubs
spiraeas once again featured in garden designs.
Their popularity has gone from strength to strength
and no garden should be without at least one
variety.
A
personal favourite is Spiraea japonica ‘Gold
Flame’. Its young, emerging leaves are
bronze-red turning sulphur-yellow and then a
light green. The dark pink flowers are less
conspicuous. ‘Golden Princess’ is
similar but by early summer its foliage is bright
yellow.
The
variety ‘Little Princess’ is low
growing forming a 2 ft high, dense mound of
mid-green leaves with rose-pink flowers in summer.
Even lower growing is S. j. ‘Nana’
with dark pink flowers, 18 inches high with
a similar spread.
For something totally different
grow the attractive S. j. ‘Shirobana’.Its
party trick is to produce all white and all
dark pink flowers at the same time on the same
plant.
The
spiraea twins are S. x vanhouttei and S. thunbergii.
Both grow to 5-6 ft in height with arching sprays
of white flowers in early summer. The latter
may flower a few days before vanhouttei that
has darker green foliage. The double white,
spring flowering S. prunifolia has the added
advantage of good autumn colour in shades of
yellow, orange and red.
Be
careful with S. douglasii. The attractive deep
pink flowers appear in mid-summer but it has
an unfortunate habit of suckering. That’s
fine if you want to give rooted pieces to friends
but left alone it makes a big clump.
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