Texas elbow bush is often called "Spring Herald," because it is usually the first to bloom in the spring. Its delicate yellowish-green flowers appear in early February or March before the leaves, in the axils of the last year's leaves. It grows in North Central Texas to the Edwards Plateau and into the Trans-Pecos, in open pastures and thickets. It has an irregular growth habit, with drooping branches that often layer and form thickets. Its light green leaves provide an attractive contrast in the landscape, and are among the first to appear in the spring. Texas elbow-bush can form an interesting background in a naturalistic landscape, and careful pruning will promote a denser shrub. Female plants produce fleshy, blue-black fruits that are an important food source for birds and small mammals. Excellent choice for xeriscaping. Survives year after year across the southwest in areas with very little rainfall.
Plant Habit or Use: medium shrub/large shrub/small tree
Exposure: sun/partial sun
Flower Color: yellow - green
Blooming Period: spring - flowers do not have petals but have pubescens
Fruit Characteristics: blue - black drupe
Height: to 15 feet
Width: to 15 feet
Plant Character: deciduous
Heat Tolerance: high
Water Requirements: very low
Soil Requirements: adaptable
USDA Hardiness Zone: 7
My husband and I are putting together an project for people to find plants at various phenophases in their gardens and in nature. It appears on our website, YourGardenShow.com, in combination with USANPN, in the tab "Citizen Science". May we permission the forsythia in fruit photo to use?
ReplyDeleteYourGardenShow is free, and is organized around a garden journal which you can chose to share or not and so it makes phenophase recording and reporting easy.
Please let me know if it is possible to permission any photo, and what the attribution should be. If it is a stock image,pleaseletmeknow the price. Thanks! Keep up the good work. Lisa@YourGardenShow.com