Tripple Brook Farm

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Genus: L

Lamiastrum
yellow archangel
Lamium
Dead nettle
Laportea
wood nettle
Laurentia
blue star creeper
Lavandula
lavender
Ledum
Labrador tea
Liatris
Blazing star
Lilium
Turk's-cap lily
Lindera
spicebush
Liriope
creeping lilyturf
Lobelia
cardinal flower; great blue lobelia
Lonicera
honeysuckle
Ludwigia
False loosestrife
Luzula
common wood-rush
Lycopodium
ground cedar; tree club moss
Lygodium
climbing fern; Hartford fern
Lyonia
swamp andromeda
Lysimachia
loosestrife

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Catalog as of February 04, 2010

Lindera

(Lauraceae - laurel family)
About 100 species of aromatic, deciduous or evergreen trees and shrubs, native primarily to temperate and tropical regions of southern and eastern Asia. The genus is named for Swedish physician and botanist of the 18th century, Johann Linder.

benzoin decid shr • ht 6-12' • zones 4-9

spicebush


native, fragrant, screen, wildlife, part shade - sun
e N Amer

This fine, clean-foliaged native shrub deserves to be known and utilized more than it is. In the early spring a profusion of small yellow flowers adorn its leafless branches, brightening the landscape at a time when most other native plants are just beginning to awaken. Handsome throughout the summer with its neat, clean foliage. Spicebush stands out again in the landscape in the fall, when its showy scarlet fruits ripen and the leaves turn bright yellow. Spicebush is dense, full and broadly rounded when grown in full sun. Tolerates shade well, responding by developing a more open and upright form. A good choice for screens, specimens, shrub borders or naturalizing. All parts of the plant are pleasantly aromatic when bruised. A fragrant tea can be brewed from the leaves, twigs, and bark. The berries, when dried and powdered, can be used as a substitute for allspice. Spicebush is host to the larvae of the spicebush swallowtail butterfly, and birds feed enthusiastically on the fruit. Both male and female plants blossom, but only female plants bear fruit; a male-female pair is required for fruit production. Planting two or more of these seed-grown plants improves the odds that at least one of your plants will bear fruit.

cat # 1D7T
$14.95 each / 3+, $14.50 ea