Sumac - Staghorn

Handy Gardening Secrets shrubs  


Sumac - Staghorn

These colorful, nonpoisonous shrubs or small trees are rhizomatous. The Staghorn Sumac, Rhus typhina, is the most well-known sumac. Staghorn sumac reaches 25 feet in height at maturity with an equal spread. Its branches resemble deer antlers. It is not as tolerant of poorly drained soils as other sumacs. The large dark crimson - or rarely orange to yellow - pinnate leaves of this sumac have 15-31 narrow, leaflets that can be up to (6") long. The stems and fruits of Staghorn Sumac are densely hairy, as in the "velvet stage" of a stag's antlers. The large clumps form bright splashes of color along forest margins, road banks, and fencerows and in old fields over much of the Appalachians. ... additional info

 

Boxwood - Wintergreen It is a broadleaf evergreen upright shrub with medium green to dark green foilage. The Korean Wintergreen Boxwood shrub, Microphylla koreana, is also known as the liffleleaf boxwood. It is a formal or tightly informal shrub, usually reserved for shady conditions and commonly used as a hedge, foundation planting, edger, or facer shrub.

Sumac - Staghorn