Butterfly Bush – The Tree Center https://www.thetreecenter.com Tue, 20 Feb 2024 19:47:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://www.thetreecenter.com/c/uploads/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Butterfly Bush – The Tree Center https://www.thetreecenter.com 32 32 Vanilla Treat™ Butterfly Bush https://www.thetreecenter.com/vanilla-treat-butterfly-bush/ https://www.thetreecenter.com/vanilla-treat-butterfly-bush/#respond Mon, 27 Feb 2023 23:25:02 +0000 https://www.thetreecenter.com/?post_type=product&p=708670 https://www.thetreecenter.com/vanilla-treat-butterfly-bush/feed/ 0 Dapper® White Butterfly Bush https://www.thetreecenter.com/dapper-white-butterfly-bush/ https://www.thetreecenter.com/dapper-white-butterfly-bush/#respond Mon, 27 Feb 2023 23:22:21 +0000 https://www.thetreecenter.com/?post_type=product&p=708667 https://www.thetreecenter.com/dapper-white-butterfly-bush/feed/ 0 Buddleia Dapper Lavender Butterfly Bush https://www.thetreecenter.com/buddleia-dapper-lavender-butterfly-bush/ https://www.thetreecenter.com/buddleia-dapper-lavender-butterfly-bush/#respond Thu, 31 Mar 2022 18:52:14 +0000 https://www.thetreecenter.com/?post_type=product&p=655722
  • 5-inch fat spikes of lavender blooms
  • In flower from early summer right into fall
  • Sweet scent attracts butterflies and pollinators
  • Dense growth and handsome gray-green foliage
  • Grows well in hot, sunny places in the garden
  • Grow the Dapper Lavender Buddleja in full sun, and in well-drained soil, including sandy soils and dry ground. It is hardy to zone 6, and can be grown in planters in zones 8 and 9. It doesn’t set seeds, so you don’t need to dead-head, except if you are a super-neat gardener. Prune in spring, once the new buds are swelling, removing all weak stems and shortening back to the first pair of fat buds.]]>
    DAPPER, (/ˈdapə/): adjective. To appear neat, well-presented and tidy. ‘He looked very dapper in his new suit’.

    Dapper Lavender Buddleja, (/ˈdapə /ˈlav(ə)ndə /ˈbʌdliə/): Exciting new plant with fat lavender flowers on a compact and tidy gray-leaf shrub. ‘My garden looks great with the Dapper Lavender Buddleja in it.’

    However we might define it, you will love this great new buddleja bush, which combines the small size of other new buddleja with the traditional fat blossoms of older garden favorites. Smothered in 5-inch long flower spikes that are fat and full, this plant is great in all the sunny spots of your garden, blooming continuously and profusely from early summer right into the fall. Once your spring blooms are over, let this easy plant step in and keep the color parade going. It thrives in heat, sunshine and drier soils (once established) and also looks wonderful in pots and planter boxes.

    Growing the Dapper Lavender Buddleja

    Size and Appearance

    The Dapper Lavender Buddleja is an exciting new variety of that old favorite, the butterfly bush. It grows only 3 or 4 feet tall and wide, which it will do in a single season once it is established, and at any time from early summer into fall it will have an average of 25 flower spikes on it, making a wonderful and colorful show. It produces many slender stems from low down, which are covered in soft, gray-green leaves. The leaves are up to 3 inches long and ¾ of an inch wide, with a textured surface, and they taper to a point. The soft coloring looks lovely in the sunlight from the moment the stems sprout in spring, perfect against a background of darker greens, and mixing with any color in your beds.

    By early summer the end of every branch has developed a long, fat spike of about 100 tiny flowers – not some skinny spike with scattered blooms, but a fat one, half as wide as it is long, packed solid with blooms. These are small, like tiny jewels, with 5 open petals that are a warm, bright lavender, surrounding a golden-orange center. They open from the bottom up, and it takes a couple of weeks for a spike to fully open, with each individual blossom lasting about 5 days. The spikes are about 3 inches long when the first blooms open, but 5 inches long by the time the top-most blooms are open. No seeds are produced, and the flower spikes simply shrivel and disappear. As that top flower spike fades, side-shoots sprout rapidly out, carrying more flowers, so that blooming continues and continues, right into mid-fall, and often only stops when the first hard frost comes. As well, the blooms have the classic sweet scent we look for in these plants, and they attract big numbers of butterflies and other pollinators that will delight children of every age.

    Using the Dapper Lavender Buddleja in Your Garden

    Wherever you have hot, sunny places that need color, the Dapper Lavender Buddleja is the perfect choice. The foliage and flower colors don’t blur out in bright light, and this bush loves heat and drier soil, making a fabulous show. Plant it on rocky slopes, or against a sunny wall or fence. Grow it among other shrubs that bloom earlier, so that the beds has continuous interest and blossoms. Grow a row along a path or driveway to make a simple but spectacular display for months. In zones 8 and 9 you can grow it in a planter box or pot, standing out all winter.

    Hardiness

    This bush is hardy from zone 6 to zone 9. It is deciduous, and branches may die in winter, but it re-spouts strongly in spring. It is often late to sprout, so be patient – it will come back just fine.

    Sun Exposure and Soil Conditions

    Full sun and well-drained soil is essential for this plant to grow long-term in your garden. Avoid places that are wet, especially in winter, which can kill it during cold weather. Sandy, gravel and rocky soils are fine, and don’t add organic material when planting, unless the soil is almost pure sand.

    Maintenance and Pruning

    You can remove spent flower spikes if you want, but generally they disappear among the new growth. Just remove the flower spike, and not any of the branch below it. Spring pruning is necessary, and in colder zones it is best to wait until the new buds are swelling, so that you know which parts are alive. Cut back to just above a pair of fat buds, and remove any small, twiggy stems. Established plants grow rapidly – some liquid fertilizer for flowering shrubs is a great idea to keep it going – and soon become full-sized again. Pests and diseases are usually absent, and this great bush is very easy to grow.

    History and Origin of the Dapper Lavender Buddleja

    The butterfly bush, Buddleja davidii, (sometimes spelled as ‘Buddleia’) was first found along the border between China and Tibet by the French missionary and naturalist Pere Armand David in 1869. He sent seeds to Europe, and it rapidly became a popular and easy garden shrub. Since then, in some parts of the country, it has become invasive, and forms that don’t produce seeds, like the Dapper Lavender Buddleja, are valuable where there are concerns about spreading into wild areas. This variety was created by Scott Trees, who lives in Arroyo Grande, California. Scott is an experienced breeder at the University of California, with over 300 patents to his name. He began with two older varieties of butterfly bush, ‘Attraction’ and ‘Miss Ruby’, both with dark-purple blooms. From them he developed a variety called Cranraz (`Boscranz`), and then used that variety with other seedlings he had bred. Among the many plants he created, he selected one in 2015 that he named `Buddaplav`. This plant was granted a patent in 2021, and is released as the lavender color in the Dapper range of new compact butterfly bushes from Star® Roses and Plants.

    Buying the Dapper Lavender Buddleja at the Tree Center

    You will love the traditional fat blooms of this great compact butterfly bush, and their gorgeous coloring. While old butterfly bushes grew large, needing a lot of space, this compact bush can be grown by everyone, and it doesn’t produce seeds that can spread. Butterfly bushes are always popular, and you will love this one, for sure. Order now – we only have a limited quantity, and they won’t last long.

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    White Profusion Butterfly Bush https://www.thetreecenter.com/white-profusion-butterfly-bush/ https://www.thetreecenter.com/white-profusion-butterfly-bush/#respond Thu, 09 Sep 2021 17:26:45 +0000 https://www.thetreecenter.com/?post_type=product&p=633986
  • Huge spikes of snow-white flowers to 16 inches long
  • A profusion of blooms from early summer to fall
  • Rich honey fragrance attracts many butterflies and pollinators
  • Grows well even in poor soils and urban gardens
  • Dead-head to prevent seeding
  • Plant your White Profusion Butterfly Bush in full sun for the best results, and in well-drained soil, away from areas that are wet in winter. It grows well even in dry, sandy soils, once established, and it thrives just about anywhere, including in city gardens. It is free of pest and disease problems, and grows rapidly. Prune hard annually, as soon as new growth begins, removing all dead wood and cutting back stems to 2 or 3 healthy buds. Remove flower spikes as they go over, to stimulate more blooms and to prevent seeding.]]>
    White flowers are wonderful in any garden, especially from late afternoon to dark, when they become more and more conspicuous, as other flowers fade into the dusk. Since many of us work and come home later in the day, they are ideal for those summer evenings outdoors relaxing or around the bar-b-que. Plus, they look great with all other colors, and fabulous against dark evergreens. For long periods of blooming through summer and into fall, the butterfly bush is a classic favorite – mostly with flowers of purple, red or pink. But there is one outstanding bush with pure-white blossoms that always wins the trials and awards. Its name says it all, with the White Profusion Butterfly Bush bringing a true profusion of enormous spikes of white blossoms to light up your garden. It always tops the list of the best butterfly bushes, and is considered by all to be the most outstanding white among classic, large-flowered types. Growing up to 8 feet tall and wide it makes a superb specimen behind smaller shrubs, or growing between evergreens, and of course its rich fragrance will attract not just you, but a profusion of different butterflies and other pollinators, all set to have a honey party in your garden – bring the kids along.

    Growing the White Profusion Butterfly Bush

    Size and Appearance

    The White Profusion Butterfly Bush is a deciduous shrub that grows rapidly, growing each year into a rounded bush up to 8 feet tall and wide, but it can be smaller in cooler zones. It branches profusely from low down, becoming an open bush with an attractive light look. The long, oval leaves are up to 6 inches long, with a thick textured feel, and they are rich dark-green with a silvery underside. The young stems are also silvery-green, covered with a dense coating of very short white hairs. Flowering begins before mid-summer, and lasts well into the fall, even up to the first frost. The tiny flowers are pure-white like little trumpets with a flat-open flaring mouth of 4 or 5 petals. The center is golden yellow. Hundreds of blooms are carried in huge conical heads, 12 to 16 inches long, which grow first from the ends of each new stem, and then from side shoots that keep on being produced. A bush in bloom in a wonderful sight of perfect white, and truly a profusion of beauty. The blooms release a rich, sweet fragrance of honey, and they attract hordes of different species of butterflies and other pollinators, sometimes even hummingbirds.

    Using the White Profusion Butterfly Bush in Your Garden

    The pure white beauty of the White Profusion Butterfly Bush makes it an outstanding bush to plant among dark-leaved evergreens. Plant it behind spring and early summer-flowering shrubs to keep the color coming, and make it the centerpiece of a garden of white flowers. It fits perfectly with other shrubs, and brings dark colors around it to life. Grow it in any hot and dry area, and on slopes and banks.

    Hardiness

    You can grow the tough and reliable White Profusion Butterfly Bush in zone 5 and all the way through into zone 9. It has good winter hardiness, but in cold zones it should be planted in a very well-drained spot, and away from areas that accumulate ice and snow.

    Sun Exposure and Soil Conditions

    Plant the White Profusion Butterfly Bush in full sun for best results, especially in cooler zones. It grows well and vigorously in any well-drained soil, including poor rocky and sandy soils, and in urban soils too. It will grow in clay, but not in areas that are often wet and sticky. It is equally happy in alkaline and acid soils, and it’s incredibly easy to grow.

    Maintenance and Pruning

    You normally won’t see any pests or diseases on the White Profusion Butterfly Bush, which grows well with very little care. It is slow to sprout in spring, so wait until you see new growth before pruning. Trim out any dead wood, and shorten back last year’s growth to leave 2 or 3 pairs of healthy buds to grow. You can trim it short, or leave a framework of older branches, as suits you best. Remove the blossom heads as soon as they are finished, to prevent seed production and to encourage more blooms. Cut back to the first pair of leaves – usually, you will already see two new flower spikes developing just below the old one.

    History and Origin of the White Profusion Butterfly Bush

    Named after the French naturalist and missionary Pere Armand David, the butterfly bush, Buddleja davidii, grows in Central Asia. Pere David found it in 1869 along the border between Tibet and China. Once introduced in western countries it became very popular, and soon many different color forms were being raised from seeds. The variety called White Profusion first appeared in 1945, but its exact origins, and who bred it, have been lost.

    Buying the White Profusion Butterfly Bush at the Tree Center

    You can tell just how good this variety is, because it received the Award of Garden Merit from Britain’s Royal Horticultural Society in 1993, and then had it confirmed in 2002, after the Society carried out extensive trials of the many different varieties of butterfly bushes. Everyone agrees that this is the white butterfly bush that is like no other – la crème de la crème (or should that be ‘the whitest of the whites’?). Anyway, we know you will love it, but order right away, as our best butterfly bushes – like this one – sell out the fastest. This variety is not sterile, and should not be planted in areas where butterfly bushes are known to escape into wild areas.

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    Nanho Purple Butterfly Bush https://www.thetreecenter.com/nanho-purple-butterfly-bush/ https://www.thetreecenter.com/nanho-purple-butterfly-bush/#respond Thu, 09 Sep 2021 17:15:03 +0000 https://www.thetreecenter.com/?post_type=product&p=633984
  • Flower spikes up to 12 inches long
  • Rich plum-purple blooms from summer to the first frost
  • Prolific bloomer, with fragrant blooms, on a compact bush
  • Attracts hordes of beautiful butterflies to your garden
  • Dead-head to prevent seeding
  • Full sun is best for the Nanho Purple Butterfly Bush, which thrives in hot places, and enjoys any well-drained soil, even poor sandy soils and urban conditions. Once established it is very drought resistant, and almost never bothered by pests or diseases. Prune hard in spring to stimulate strong new growth carrying the flowers, and dead-head to keep those blooms coming, and to prevent it from seeding.]]>
    Butterfly bushes arouse strong feelings in gardeners. Some consider them as noxious weeds – which they can be in some parts of the country. Others consider them indispensable summer and fall bloomers, and magnets for butterflies. There is no doubt that pollinating insects, from bees to butterflies, benefit from them as important food sources, and if you live in an area where they are not so invasive – cooler parts of the east for example – then go ahead, enjoy them. Here at the Tree Center we believe in satisfying everyone, so if you are looking for sterile, non-invasive types, sold as ‘Nectar Bush’ in Oregon, check out ‘Miss Molly’, ‘Miss Ruby’, and all the Flutterby™ and Lo & Behold® varieties. But if you are in many parts of the country, or want to dead-head your bushes carefully, then the classic Nanho Purple Butterfly Bush is a huge favorite and a top choice. It has those huge, fragrant flower spikes we all love, grows only about 5 feet tall, and it pumps out blooms for weeks and weeks, swarming every day with butterflies – what a sight!

    Growing the Nanho Purple Butterfly Bush

    Size and Appearance

    The Nanho Purple Butterfly Bush is a deciduous shrub, branching from the base, forming a broad, rounded bush about 5 feet tall and 6 feet wide within a couple of seasons. The stems are slender, with pale-gray bark, forming a woody base. Because of the breeding of this variety, it has smaller leaves than usual, no more than 5 inches long. They are slender and willow-like, and a beautiful, soft, gray-green color, with a thick textured feel, creating a plant with an open, airy feel to it.

    This bush blooms on new growth that develops in spring from the stems. By June it will be in bloom, and flowering continues on this fabulous bush all the way into September, often only stopped by the first hard frost. The individual flowers are tiny, but they are packed by their hundreds into long, tapering spikes that top every branch. These spikes are between 6 and 12 inches long, depending on your growing conditions – the early spikes in the season tend to be the largest. The blooms have a sweet, honey-like fragrance, and they are a beautiful and striking plum-purple, with each individual flower having a tiny orange dot in its center. Spikes stay in bloom for a week or two, and before they have even faded completely more are opening on side-shoots. Flower production is continuous, making a striking display throughout summer and early fall. Super easy to grow, this shrub is fast-growing, and a true winner.

    Using the Nanho Purple Butterfly Bush in Your Garden

    Grow the Nanho Purple Butterfly Bush as an accent plant among other shrubs. Plant it against a wall, or along a picket fence – that really highlights its unique open look. Grow it near where your children play – they will be fascinated and delighted by the hordes of butterflies it attracts. Use it in open, sunny areas and among rocks – it thrives in drier parts of your garden.

    Hardiness

    The Nanho Purple Butterfly Bush is hardy from zone 5 all the way into zone 9. This bush is always late to begin sprouting, especially in cooler zones, so be patient. Good drainage and lighter soils help it survive the winter in zone 5 – don’t plant in areas that are wet in winter, or where ice accumulates.

    Sun Exposure and Soil Conditions

    Sun, sun and more sun are best for the Nanho Purple Butterfly Bush, which thrives in hot areas. It grows easily and quickly in all well-drained soils, even poor sandy ones and in urban conditions. Avoid moist areas and low-lying wet spots. All kinds of soils, from alkaline and acidic are suitable.

    Maintenance and Pruning

    Pests and diseases are rare, making this one of the easiest bushes to grow successfully – as well as one of the quickest. For the best blooming and appearance, prune in spring. These shrubs are slow to sprout, so wait until you see some buds opening, and then prune immediately. Remove all dead wood back to a healthy pair of buds. Shorten back stems of the year before to about 2 or 3 pairs of buds. You can keep a framework of older branches to give height, but growth is rapid and plants soon reach full size within the season. Dead-heading, by removing flower spikes as they go over, stops seed development and encourages the most blossoms.

    History and Origin of the Nanho Purple Butterfly Bush

    The butterfly bush, Buddleja davidii, comes from China, where it was found along the border between China and Tibet by the French missionary and naturalist Pere Armand David in 1869. He sent it to the west, where it immediately became popular. There are different varieties in different parts of China, and in Kansu there is a smaller, more cold-resistant type with narrower and grayer leaves. It was introduced to the West in 1914 by the naturalist Reginald Farrer, and today we know it as Buddleja davidii var. nanhohensis. In 1980 breeders at the Monrovia Nursery in California crossed that variety with an old Buddleja davidii variety called ‘Royal Red’. That old variety was bred in Ohio in the 1940s. Monrovia then crossed the seedlings with ’Royal Red’ again. Among the seedlings they got was a compact plant with gorgeously-colored purple blooms. It was named ‘Monum’, but never patented. In 1997 Monrovia registered it with the trademark of Petite Plum®, and it’s also sometimes (mistakenly) sold as Petite Purple, but most often simply as Nanho Purple, to show where it came from.

    Buying the Nanho Purple Butterfly Bush at the Tree Center

    This classic butterfly bush was recognized as very valuable in 2002, when it received the Award of Garden Merit from Britain’s Royal Horticultural Society. It was also graded as ‘Good’ in trials by the Chicago Botanic Gardens. We love it’s classic beauty and large blooms, but on a more compact and manageable bush. It’s a widely-recognized name, so it sells fast – order now.

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    Flutterby Petite® Snow White Butterfly Bush https://www.thetreecenter.com/flutterby-petite-snow-white-butterfly-bush/ https://www.thetreecenter.com/flutterby-petite-snow-white-butterfly-bush/#respond Sun, 31 Jan 2021 13:10:47 +0000 https://origin.thetreecenter.com/?post_type=product&p=549595
  • Compact non-seedling and non-invasive butterfly bush
  • Spikes of white flowers through summer and fall
  • Neat green leaves make the perfect background
  • Grows well in hot and dry spots
  • Reaches full size and blooms profusely in the first year
  • Full sun is best for the Flutterby Petite® Snow White Butterfly Bush, making it bloom like crazy. It grows best in drier, very well-drained places, in light and sandy soils. Once established it is drought resistant, and rarely bothered by pests or diseases. It doesn’t need dead-heading – the flowers just fade away. Prune hard in late spring, just as the new growth is sprouting.]]>
    White blooms look so lovely in the garden, and they fit in with every other flower color perfectly. Butterfly bushes are great too – easy shrubs that thrive out in hot, dry spots where other plants can fail. Bring the two together in a bush that doesn’t seed, and so can’t spread into surrounding ecosystems, and what do you have? The Flutterby Petite® Snow White Butterfly Bush. Dwarf’s are an optional extra, but Snow White herself is small, and will bring spikes of blooms from mid-summer right to the first hard frost, on a fast-growing bush that tops out around 3 feet tall. A great filler for gaps that you might have, and perfect for dry-area gardening too. Did we mention the butterflies – well they will come, in profusion, and maybe hummingbirds too? Drawn to them like a magnet, they sip the delicious nectar from those beautiful white flowers, while you and the kids enjoy their company. You can enjoy this bush without concerns about it spreading from seed – because there won’t be any. Even in places like Washington state and Oregon it can be grown, with the name ‘nectar bush’, to avoid any confusion with those big, old-fashioned butterfly bushes that have spread in some areas so badly.

    Growing the Flutterby Petite® Snow White Butterfly Bush

    Size and Appearance

    The Snow White Butterfly Bush is a compact deciduous shrub with open branching, growing between 2 and 3 feet tall and wide in a single season. In warm areas, if not pruned, it might reach 5 feet in a few years, but hard spring pruning is recommended. The young stems are slim and gray-green, while older stems are more gray, with peeling bark. The leaves are slender, tapering to a point with toothed edges. They have a soft touch, and they are green with some gray overtones, and about 2 inches long. New growth begins once the weather and soil warm, and it isn’t long before you see flower clusters developing at the end of each branch. These open first, but soon side shoots develop flower clusters too, keeping this bush blooming and blooming from mid-summer all through fall, usually only stopping with a hard frost.

    The flower spikes are about 4 inches long, packed with many tiny tubular flowers that are pure white. The soft tones of white, green and gray are very beautiful in any garden, and of course they don’t clash with any other plant color. Individual blooms last just a few days, but more clusters keep coming and coming. When the flowers fade no seed pods are produced and the spent flowers fade away beneath the new growth.

    Using the Flutterby Petite® Snow White Butterfly Bush in Your Garden

    For the front of any sunny bed, in a rock garden, on a slope, at the top of a wall or in a planter box – anywhere in your garden is the right place for this versatile bush. It looks great in front of taller plants, and it mixes with perennial flowers too. Grow it in a planter surrounded by annual flowers, or use it for an edging where a bed meets a path or driveway. There is always a spot for such a versatile and graceful small bush.

    Hardiness

    This bush is hardy in zone 5, and it grows in all warmer zones. In cooler areas hardiness is connected with dry soil, and sitting in wet soil during winter will increase the risk of winter injury or death.

    Sun Exposure and Soil Conditions

    The more sun the better is how the Snow White Butterfly Bush likes it. Avoid shade, and also avoid wet soil and damp places. Well-drained soils that are sandy and dry are preferred, although most garden soils will grow this plant easily. There is no need to add compost or manure – poor soil is perfectly suitable, and maybe even better. Water regularly for the first few weeks after planting, but once well-established this plant is resistant to dryness and periods of drought.

    Maintenance and Pruning

    The Snow White Butterfly Bush is rarely bothered by pests or diseases. It doesn’t need dead-heading, except for neatness, and all it takes to grow it well is a trim in spring. Wait until you see the first signs of growth – this may take a few weeks in colder zones. Once you can see buds and growing leaves, trim back to just above a healthy pair of buds, cutting back to 6 to 12 inches tall, and just leaving a few of the strongest stems. Even if it dies to the ground it will usually re-sprout, and within a few weeks it will be growing vigorously.

    History and Origin of the Flutterby Petite® Snow White Butterfly Bush

    Once we realized that the old-fashioned butterfly bush was a problem in some parts of the country, spreading by seed into natural areas and competing with native plants, horticulturists began to look at solutions. Dr. Peter Podaras at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, set up a breeding program to develop non-seeding varieties. He bred together the common butterfly bush, which came originally from China, called Buddleja davidii, with a much rarer species from western China called Buddleja alternifolia. Two different species like this will often produce offspring, but that offspring will be sterile, like the mule. This is what happened, and among the hundreds of plants he grew were some that were attractive, compact for smaller gardens, and sterile. These are gathered together in the Flutterby Petite® range, a registered trademark belonging to Cornell University. The best white variety was patented with the name ‘Podaras #15’ in 2011, and sold as Snow White.

    Buying the Flutterby Petite® Snow White Butterfly Bush at the Tree Center

    These great new varieties – call them nectar bushes – solve the problem of butterfly bushes being invasive. Now everyone can grow them freely, anywhere in the country. Make your butterflies happy and feel free yourself by growing these great little shrubs. Order now, because the rush is on, and they go out of stock almost as soon as we have them available.

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    Pugster® Periwinkle Butterfly Bush https://www.thetreecenter.com/pugster-periwinkle-butterfly-bush/ https://www.thetreecenter.com/pugster-periwinkle-butterfly-bush/#respond Mon, 28 Dec 2020 21:09:59 +0000 https://origin.thetreecenter.com/?post_type=product&p=544736 https://www.thetreecenter.com/pugster-periwinkle-butterfly-bush/feed/ 0 Flutterby Grande® Peach Cobbler Butterfly Bush https://www.thetreecenter.com/flutterby-grande-peach-cobbler-butterfly-bush/ https://www.thetreecenter.com/flutterby-grande-peach-cobbler-butterfly-bush/#respond Thu, 11 Jun 2020 15:48:26 +0000 https://www.thetreecenter.com/?post_type=product&p=461205
  • Spectacular pink to salmon blooms
  • Tall, arching bush to 6 feet
  • In constant bloom from mid-summer to frost
  • Sterile, produces no seed and cannot spread
  • Tough and drought-resistant
  • Grow the Flutterby Grande® Peach Cobbler Butterfly Bush in full sun, in any well-drained soil, including poor, urban soils, sands, and dry clay. This tough plant is very drought-resistant once it is established, which only takes a few months, and it is long-lived and normally free of pests and diseases. It resists wind, rain, and high temperatures. The only care needed is an annual pruning to remove thinner stems and leave a sturdy, open framework of short branches to produce new growth for the season.]]>
    The Butterfly Bush has gone through a revolution in the past decade or two. Once it was realized how invasive it could be, breeders set to work creating new forms that would not produce seed, and that would therefore be safe to grow. They were successful, but some gardeners still hankered after the old-style, big bushes, with large curving flower spikes, sweetly scented and a magnet for butterflies. If you love that kind of butterfly bush, but want to protect your local environment, then the Flutterby Grande® series, created at Cornell University, is for you. Among the varieties, our personal favorite, and the one we are sure you will love too, is Peach Cobbler. Producing no seed, it grows to over 6 feet, and it is smothered with big, fat flower heads – a real winner for sure.

    The Flutterby Grande® Peach Cobbler Butterfly Bush is a medium-sized shrub, with long arching branches, reaching heights of between 6 and 8 feet, with a spread of 4 to 6 feet, depending on where you climate, and how hard you prune this bush. The leaves are 5½ inches long, but slender and tapering, only 1½ inch wide at their widest point. They have an attractive textured surface, slightly hairy, and they are a beautiful silvery-green. The leaves are quite widely spaced along the branches, so the bush has an open, airy look.

    Of course, with a butterfly bush, it is the flowers we are here for, and this splendid plant certainly has those to offer us. The end of every branch carries a long, arching spray of flowers, in clusters along the stem, creating a conical flower head a full 4½ inches long, and 2½ inches across at the widest point. These long flower heads have a graceful, casual elegance that fits perfectly into every garden setting. There are about 600 tiny flowers in every head, making a magnificent show. Each flower begins pink, with a deeper pink center, and turns beautiful salmon-peach as it matures. Every branch begins with a flower head at the end, and then produces many side-branches, each bearing another flower-head. The result is a bush literally covered in blossoms, that begin in early to mid-summer, and continue right up to the first hard frost. That long flowering season is perfect for continuing your garden display, after the flurry of flowering in spring. Since the flowers are sterile, and cannot produce seed, they just fade away, to be replaced by new ones, and you don’t even have to dead-head, if you don’t want to. The flowers will just keep coming and coming.

    We don’t just love the flowers, so do the butterflies, bees and hummingbirds. This plant is a wonderful source of rich nectar for local insect populations, and these plants are always highly-recommended for butterfly gardens, and by beekeepers. This classic plant has always been a top favorite with children, who love to watch the activity as butterflies in a rainbow of colors cluster on the flower heads, feeding. Hummingbirds too will visit, and everyone loves to see those amazing creature hovering in the air while they feed. The sweet fragrance of the blooms will fill the air, and you can be content, knowing that the Flutterby Grande® Peach Cobbler Butterfly Bush can never spread seeds into surrounding natural areas.

    Plant the Flutterby Grande® Peach Cobbler Butterfly Bush in full sun. This plant thrives on heat and drier soil, so it is a perfect choice for hot, sunny places in your garden. When newly-planted you should water once or twice a week, but within a few months it will be growing vigorously, and drought resistant. Because it is so drought-resistant, this plant is a perfect choice for a xeric, or ‘drought-proof’ garden, and it will bring brightness and color, yet be low-maintenance. These plants rarely suffer from any pests or diseases, and if the soil is well-drained, and the plant is in full sun, you will find it very, very easy to grow. An annual pruning is all that is needed. Do this in spring, once you begin to see new growth on your bush. Remove any dead branches back to where you see buds growing, and remove all thin branches. Leave a framework a foot or two tall of the sturdiest shoots from the previous year or two, as fresh, newer branches produce the most flowering shoots. That’s it. nothing more is needed.

    The Flutterby Grande® Peach Cobbler Butterfly Bush was created by Peter Podaras in 2005, at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, where he was a plant breeder in the Department of Horticulture. He took pollen from an old garden favorite, Buddleja davidii `Pink Delight` and used it to pollinate flowers of the rare and amazing yellow butterfly bush, Buddleja weyeriana `Sungold’. Among the seedlings he raised one caught his eye, and he and the University patented it with the name of ‘Podaras #5’ in 2011, after it had been carefully trialed and assessed. Because of its size he added it to his series of taller, non-seeding plants called Flutterby Grande®, and gave it the name Peach Cobbler because of its flower colors. Our plants are grown under license, and they are true to that original plant. Everyone is growing these new, no-seeding butterfly bushes, that can be sold and grown as ‘Nectar Bush’ even in states that have banned Buddleja. We always sell our stock of these beauties very quickly, so order now – you won’t regret it.

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    Pugster® White Butterfly Bush https://www.thetreecenter.com/pugster-white-butterfly-bush/ https://www.thetreecenter.com/pugster-white-butterfly-bush/#respond Sun, 17 May 2020 01:51:29 +0000 https://www.thetreecenter.com/?post_type=product&p=490361
  • Foot-long spikes of pure white flowers
  • Non-stop flowering from mid-summer through fall
  • Fragrant and very attractive to butterflies
  • Great choice for sunny, dry spots in your garden
  • Cold hardy throughout zone 5
  • Full sun is perfect for the Pugster® White Butterfly Bush, which thrives in heat. It grows rapidly and strongly in any well-drained soil, including poor soils, urban soils and sands and gravels too. In cold zones its winter survival is enhanced by growing in well-drained soil, but this variety is more cold-resistant than many others. Pests and diseases are normally absent, and simple spring pruning is all the care needed. Dead-heading is recommended to prevent seeding and to promote maximum bloom production.]]>
    Butterfly bushes are known for their glowing jewel colors, with long spikes of blooms giving off a honey fragrance that attracts butterflies, other insects, and even hummingbirds. The trouble is that these plants are tall, reaching 8 feet or more quickly, and they take up a lot of room. Some of the newer dwarf forms are tantalizing, and they are great garden shrubs, but they don’t have those big flower spikes. At least, they didn’t before the development of the Pugster range, which puts traditional big flowers spikes onto dwarf bushes just a few feet tall. You get the best of both worlds – big, showy blossoms and compact, space-saving plants – what a great development.

    White is a very desirable color in the garden – cool, sophisticated, calm, and blending with any other color at all – no more color clashes in your garden. You can even build a white garden or bed, using nothing but white blooms – it’s a stunning look. White blooms always look great from late afternoon and all through the evening, glowing beautifully in the fading light. It’s the perfect garden color if you use your garden in those hours, to relax after a hard workday. Dark colors disappear, but white springs out to welcome you.

    If you want the combination of big white blooms on a compact bush, look no further than the Pugster® White Butterfly Bush. Like a short but sturdy pug dog, and just as cute, it grows only 2 feet wide, with an arching spread. The flower spikes are an enormous 13 inches long, and they keep on coming and coming from early summer right through fall to the first frost. This great little plant will be top dog in your garden.

    Growing the Pugster® White Butterfly Bush

    Size and Appearance

    The Pugster White Butterfly Bush is a deciduous shrub with a compact dense structure. The stems are unusually thick and strong for a dwarf plant, giving it a very sturdy look. These thick stems have leaves closely placed along them, so you get a naturally bushy and dense plant – very different from the traditional tall butterfly bush, with its open, twiggy look. The leaves are long and spear-like and dark green, with a gray tone. They are about 5 inches long and 2 inches wide, with a long, tapering tip.

    The first flower buds appear at the end of the new branches, and later along the stems at every leaf, creating a constant and profuse display. The flowers are tiny, but with literally thousands of them in the big, fat spikes, it is very showy. These spikes are 13 inches long and 4 inches across, with a tapering conical form. The top arches over gracefully, giving a lovely look. Each tiny flower is a glowing white jewel, and when set against the gray-green leaves the look is remarkable – and gorgeous. As that first spike begins to fade new ones are already opening along the stem, so that flowering is continuous from mid-summer right into the fall.

    Using the Pugster® White Butterfly Bush in Your Garden

    Where not to plant this great bush is really the question, because it can be used pretty much anywhere in any garden. Plant it in the front of beds, tuck it between evergreens, grow a row along a fence, path or driveway, or grow it in a planter box – the choices are yours, and they are all good. With its neutral coloring you can never go wrong, no matter where you place it. Use a single plant in a smaller bed, or group them together in drifts, spacing plants 2 feet apart for a continuous flow. With its love of sun and drier soil it is perfect for those hot, difficult spots that can be so hard to fill.

    Hardiness

    The Pugster White Butterfly Bush is hardy all the way from zone 5 to zone 9. In zone 5 it is important to plant in a well-drained spot, but with its sturdy growth this variety is more cold-resistant than many other butterfly bush varieties.

    Sun Exposure and Soil Conditions

    Full sun is always the best location for this bush – shade will reduce flowering significantly. Choose a dry spot to grow it – this bush loves drier, well-drained soil, and doesn’t like heavy, wet spots at all. Too much moisture will also reduce winter survival, so in colder zones plant on higher ground, in a raised bed or on a slope.

    Maintenance and Pruning

    You can remove dead heads for appearance, but unlike other butterfly bushes, this one keeps on reblooming regardless, which is a great asset if you are busy. In spring, just as the new buds are sprouting, remove any dead, weak or damaged stems, leaving a sturdy framework. Cut the stems back by up to one-half, just above a pair of strong buds. That’s it, job done for another year. Pests and diseases are almost never problems, so relax and enjoy the beauty of the blooms, and the antics of those butterflies and hummingbirds.

    History and Origin of the Pugster® White Butterfly Bush

    Timothy White of Spring Meadow Nursery, Inc, in Spring Lake, Michigan, is a notable breeder of butterfly bushes, and he decided to breed dwarf plants with big heads – something that didn’t exist. In 2012 he crossed together a variety called ‘Pink Delight’ with one his own seedlings, called `UC 608`. The next year, among the seedlings, he found a great plant with pure white flowers and compact growth. He patented it as `SMNBDW` in 2017, and it is sold as Pugster White®.

    Buying the Pugster® White Butterfly Bush at The Tree Center

    We love being able to offer these great new plants to our customers, and with its winning combination of compact size and white blooms, this one is a top favorite. Order now, because they are leaving the farm fast, and they will soon all be gone.

    *Cannot be shipped to the states of Oregon or Washington

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    Pugster® Blue Butterfly Bush https://www.thetreecenter.com/pugster-blue-butterfly-bush/ https://www.thetreecenter.com/pugster-blue-butterfly-bush/#respond Sat, 18 Jan 2020 15:33:49 +0000 https://www.thetreecenter.com/?post_type=product&p=380166
  • Big, fat flower spikes of deep blue
  • Sturdy compact bush just 2 feet tall and wide
  • Blooms continuously from mid-summer to late fall
  • A magnet for butterflies and hummingbirds
  • Easily grown in sun and well-drained soil
  • Plant the Pugster® Blue Butterfly Bush in full sun, in any well-drained soil, including dry and poor soils. Avoid damp soil and shady places and protect plants from cold in zone 5. Pests and diseases are normally never problems, and a simple spring pruning is all it takes to keep your plant vigorous and blooming profusely. We recommend removing the flower spikes as they go over, for appearance and to prevent seed production.]]>
    Butterfly bushes are adored by gardeners, children, butterflies, and hummingbirds too. A plant in your garden is a magnet for all these creatures, but old varieties grow so large. They are big, awkward plants that need lots of room and lots of attention – or at least that is how it used to be. Most of the newer varieties around are attractive, but they have relatively small flowers, and if you love those old-fashioned, sweetly-scented big spikes of blooms, you could be disappointed. At least, that’s how it used to be. Today we have the Pugster® range, with those traditional big flower spikes, but on a compact plant that is as cute as the pug dogs whose name they take. Blue is the classic butterfly bush color, and precious for its relative rarity, but with the Pugster® Blue Butterfly Bush you can now enjoy rich, dark-blue blooms on huge flower spikes, on a small bush that fits into any garden, and that can even be grown in planters and pots on a balcony.

    The Pugster Blue Butterfly Bush is a multi-stem bush growing about 2 feet tall and spreading 2 to 3 feet wide. In warmer zones, it may grow a little larger, but some simple spring pruning will allow you to control the size for your needs. The leaves are long and slender, in pairs along the stems, which have flaking gray-brown bark. Leaves are 4½ inches long, and 1½ inches wide, tapering to a long point, and they are close together on the stems, giving you an attractive, bushy plant. The leaves have a soft, fuzzy texture, with pronounced veins, and they are a muted green, with a more gray-green tone to the undersides. The branches on this vigorous bush thrust out at about 45o, making for an upright plant that doesn’t flop or sprawl.

    By mid-summer your bush will be blooming, and it continues to bloom right through the hottest months, and into fall until the first hard frost. Every branch ends in a large flower spike, held upright so you can really appreciate it. The fat spikes are over 6 inches tall, and packed with literally thousands of tiny flowers, which open in succession from the bottom to the top of the spike. Each flower is sweetly scented, and vibrantly colored like a tiny jewel, in a deep, rich blue -purple color, and it takes about 3 weeks from the first signs of a bloom to the upper flowers fading. We recommend you remove spent flower spikes once they become mostly brown from the dead flowers, to keep your bush colorful and fresh. It only takes a few moments to snip them off, just above the first pair of leaves. New shoots, carrying more flower spikes, will sprout quickly, so blooms follow blooms in succession for months. 

    The Pugster Blue Butterfly Bush should be planted in full sun, in a warm location, especially in cooler zones. It is hardy from zone 5 to zone 9, and it grows best in well-drained soil. Good drainage is especially important in zones 5, for winter survival. Slopes and raised areas are best, and avoid low-lying, damp spots. All soils are fine with this vigorous plant, and once established dry periods are not only enjoyed, but they encourage more flowering. This plant thrives in sun and heat, and too much water is never good. Pests and diseases leave it alone, and this plant is normally trouble-free. Besides removing the dead flower spikes, a spring pruning is advised, for the best growth and vigor, and to maintain a compact form, especially in hot zones. Wait in spring until you see the first tiny leaves appearing, and then remove all thin or damaged branches. Shorten back the remaining sturdy stems by about one-third to one-half, depending on how much growth has over-wintered, and the size of bush you want. Cut back to just above a pair of healthy buds. In a few weeks your bush will be leafy and fresh, and soon the blooms will return. Butterfly bushes are slow to sprout in spring, so be patient and wait for the growth before pruning. Even if the stems are killed down to the ground in cold zones, new shoots will rise from the base, and flowering will be just as prolific. This plant is noted for its vigorous growth and sturdy structure.

    The butterfly bush, Buddleja davidii, was brought to Europe by a missionary and naturalist called Pere Armand David, in 1869. It grows in China and Tibet, among rocks and on rough ground. Many colors were developed from it, and the butterfly bush became a very popular garden plant. Recently it has seen some negative publicity because in some areas – chiefly the north-west and some parts of the south – it has escaped into wild areas, competing with native plants. In all the cooler parts of the country this doesn’t happen, and if you dead-head regularly your plant won’t make seed anyway, so it can’t spread. Some years ago, Timothy Wood, of Spring Meadow Nursery, Inc, in Spring Lake, Michigan, decided to develop some new, compact varieties, and he created the trademarked Pugster® series. For the plant called Pugster® Blue he began with a hardy English variety growing to about 6 feet called Adokeep’ (sold as Adonis Blue). He used pollen from it to make seeds on a dwarf form of his own breeding, called `UC 596`. The seeds were created in 2012, and the following year he selected a promising plant with deep blue flowers and a compact form. After successful trials he named it ‘SMNBDBT’ and patented it in 2016. These new, compact butterfly bushes are hugely popular, and our supply of plants will soon be gone. Order now and enjoy classic Buddleja blooms on a compact plant that fits into any garden.

     

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