Josee Lilac
Syringa hybrid ‘MORjos 060F'View more from Lilacs
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Botanical Name
Syringa hybrid ‘MORjos 060F'
Outdoor Growing zone
3-7
Mature Height
4-6
Mature Width
5-6
Sun needs
Full Sun
The Josée™ Lilac is a repeat-blooming hybrid Chinese lilac with beautiful fragrant blooms on a compact, rounded bush. The tight branching and small leaves make it very neat, and growing no more than 6 feet tall and wide it is perfect for smaller gardens. The abundant blossoms are a bright, lilac-pink, with the rich perfume only lilacs can bring. It blooms not only in spring, but in summer and fall too, with clusters of blooms perfect for vases, or to enjoy in the garden. Grow it in shrub beds, by doors and gates, or as an informal hedge or screen.
Full sun will make the Josée™ Lilac bloom to the max, and it grows easily in almost any well-drained soils, including alkaline soils that other plants don’t enjoy. Richer soils, with regular watering, give the best results, but once established this plant is easy to grow, drought resistant and reliable. It normally has no pests or diseases, deer leave it alone, and it doesn’t even need pruning, unless you want to.
If you live in cooler zones, lilacs are ‘must have’ shrubs for your garden. For a long time we mostly had the big, old-fashioned French lilacs, which form large bushes or small trees in time, and are often too big for today’s gardens. But lilacs come as smaller bushes too, and they have so much more to offer as shrubs for borders. Some, like the Josée™ Lilac, overcome the other criticism – they only bloom once a year – that lilacs often get. This fabulous variety blooms profusely in spring, bringing color and fragrance to your garden, and it also keeps blooming through summer and fall – not quite as profusely, but plenty to cut for a vase in the house, orto bury your nose in on a hot day in July. It’s neat and compact too, never growing above 6 feet tall and wide, so place it at the back of a bed, or where a path turns a corner, for a wonderful touch of beauty that keeps on giving.
The Josée Lilac is a compact deciduous shrub, with dense branching to the ground, that grows between 4 and 6 feet tall and around 6 feet wide. It has neat, broadly oval leaves no more than an inch or two in length, which are a bright mid-green. In fall they turn clear yellow, before falling to reveal the smooth gray bark along the stems. In spring, along with the new leaves, the flowers open. These are carried in long clusters, often made up of many smaller clusters along the stems. The display is bold and generous, with the bush smothered in delicious blooms, spreading wonderful perfume out across your garden.
The individual flowers are long tubes, opening to a short, flaring mouth. Each flower is small, but the profusion of them makes a bold impression. The color is a bright pink with lilac overtones – delightful and blending with many other garden colors. The blooms are popular with butterflies, and even with hummingbirds. After the spring bloom you can expect periods of bloom through summer and especially in fall – perfect to cut for a vase or enjoy out in the garden. Reblooming is most abundant in cooler zones with good moisture.
With its compact size this beautiful lilac is perfect for smaller gardens, or for group planting in larger ones. Grow it to fill a corner of a bed or courtyard garden. Plant it along the back of smaller beds, or in the middle of larger ones. Plant it beside a path, next to a window (to enjoy the perfume) or beside a door or gate. Grow it too in wilder parts of your garden too, where it will be right at home. Spaced 3 to 4 feet apart it will make a lovely informal hedge, or hide an ugly fence. The possibilities are endless, and every garden has a place for this lovely bush.
Completely hardy in zone 3, this lilac is a gift for cold-zone gardeners, where choices are often limited. It also grows well in warmer zones and it tolerates quite a bit of heat, but not beyond zone 7.
Full sun is best to enjoy the full blooming of the Josée Lilac. It revels in warm sunny spots. It will grow in most ordinary well-drained garden soils, especially alkaline soils, which it enjoys the most. Add plenty of organic material when planting, and each spring as mulch, especially when it is young. Don’t plant in wet places.
An annual mulch is useful, but not essential, and in very poor soil some fertilizer for flowering shrubs applied after the spring blooming is a good idea. The Josée Lilac rarely suffers from pests or diseases and it’s usually free of the powdery mildew that makes many French lilacs unattractive in summer. Deer normally don’t eat it, it needs very little attention, and pruning is strictly optional. If you do want to trim, it should only be done immediately after the spring blooming. Trimming later will prevent those valuable later flowers, and even reduce the blooms for the following spring. Removing spent flower heads is valuable in encouraging more blooms the next year. Doing this by hand is best, because if you shear the whole bush the rebloom will be reduced or delayed.
Most lilacs are varieties of the common lilac, Syringa vulgaris. Josée Lilac has a very different background. It was created early in the 20th century by Françisque Morel, a French nurseryman and breeder from Lyon, France. He is most known for creating several Clematis which are still very popular today. He also worked with lilacs and he was an early grower of different Asian species. He started with different forms of Syringa pubescens, a lilac that grows in Korea and much of China, with small, open clusters of pale-lilac flowers. Several forms of this plant are found in different parts of its range, and Morel crossed together three of them – S. meyeri, S. microphylla, and S. patula). At the time these were thought to be 3 different species, but today we put them closer together, with each one as a subspecies of Syringa pubescens, although Syringa meyeri is still often treated as a separate species. Morel died in 1925 and the plant he created remained in his nursery. It wasn’t until 1974 that someone realized its beauty and potential and decided to release it for nurseries. It was named ‘MORjos 060F’, perhaps intending to patent it, and marketed it with the trademark name of Josée™.
For something different and beautiful, the Josée Lilac is a great shrub. Perfect for colder zones and smaller gardens, you can enjoy the look and fragrance of lilacs not just in spring, but in summer and fall too – what’s not to like? But order now – this desirable variety is not often offered, and it won’t last in our nursery for long.