Changes

From Gardenology.org - Plant Encyclopedia and Gardening Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
19 bytes removed ,  00:37, 12 March 2009
incorporate template
Line 30: Line 30:  
The genus includes about 450 species of shrubs, small trees and vines which may be evergreen and deciduous.  Genus includes blueberries, cranberries, and huckleberries. Most species have small and often colorful fruits, some of which are edible.  Flowers can be attractive, tend to be small, face downward, have an urn-shape, and can come individually or in clusters.  Most have simple leaves which are oval to lance-shaped.  The tips of the leaves are frequently pointed, and the edges sometimes have serration.
 
The genus includes about 450 species of shrubs, small trees and vines which may be evergreen and deciduous.  Genus includes blueberries, cranberries, and huckleberries. Most species have small and often colorful fruits, some of which are edible.  Flowers can be attractive, tend to be small, face downward, have an urn-shape, and can come individually or in clusters.  Most have simple leaves which are oval to lance-shaped.  The tips of the leaves are frequently pointed, and the edges sometimes have serration.
   −
===Incorporate this text===
+
{{inc|
 
VACCINIUM (ancient Latin name of the blueberry). Ericacex. Blueberries, Bilberries, Deerberries, and Cranberries. Erect or creeping shrubs, often with green speckled twigs, well known in this country as the source of excellent wild berries; sometimes planted for ornament.
 
VACCINIUM (ancient Latin name of the blueberry). Ericacex. Blueberries, Bilberries, Deerberries, and Cranberries. Erect or creeping shrubs, often with green speckled twigs, well known in this country as the source of excellent wild berries; sometimes planted for ornament.
   Line 39: Line 39:  
Among the plants that lend tone to the landscape in October and November by reason of their bright foliage, many of the species of Vaccinium may be included—the brilliant red, crimson, and orange colors often persisting much longer than the bright-hued leaves of a large number of other plants. Of the ornamental species none is more strikingly beautiful late in the autumn than the common high-bush blueberry, V. corymbosum. When well grown it is a stout, thick, spreading bush 8 to 10 feet high. The plant is beautiful when in flower; the fruit is attractive and of the best quality, and the bright scarlet and crimson effects in late autumn, rivaling the sumach in brilliancy, are unsurpassed. As an ornamental plant the species deserves a place in every garden. V. j>ennsylvanicum also brightens waste places for a short time, but drops its foliage too early to be worthy of planting as an undershrub. The same is true of V. canodense, which is in many respects similar. V. stamineum, though early deciduous, is attractive when in bloom and throughput the summer by reason of its graceful habit. It is particularly adapted for sterile sandy or gravelly situations, and it is one of the very few ornamental shrubs specially suited for densely shaded situations. It has the peculiarity of never forming a true flower- bud, the blossom being open from the first. V". arbareum forms an irregular shrub too diffuse and straggling to be of value except when planted in masses at the South. V. hirsutum is as beautiful in its autumn coloring as is V. corymbosum and, like that species, retains its foliage late in the season. V. Vitis-Idsra and V. uliginosum, with their shining box-like foliage, can be used very effectively as edging for the shrubbery border. (W. M. Munson.)
 
Among the plants that lend tone to the landscape in October and November by reason of their bright foliage, many of the species of Vaccinium may be included—the brilliant red, crimson, and orange colors often persisting much longer than the bright-hued leaves of a large number of other plants. Of the ornamental species none is more strikingly beautiful late in the autumn than the common high-bush blueberry, V. corymbosum. When well grown it is a stout, thick, spreading bush 8 to 10 feet high. The plant is beautiful when in flower; the fruit is attractive and of the best quality, and the bright scarlet and crimson effects in late autumn, rivaling the sumach in brilliancy, are unsurpassed. As an ornamental plant the species deserves a place in every garden. V. j>ennsylvanicum also brightens waste places for a short time, but drops its foliage too early to be worthy of planting as an undershrub. The same is true of V. canodense, which is in many respects similar. V. stamineum, though early deciduous, is attractive when in bloom and throughput the summer by reason of its graceful habit. It is particularly adapted for sterile sandy or gravelly situations, and it is one of the very few ornamental shrubs specially suited for densely shaded situations. It has the peculiarity of never forming a true flower- bud, the blossom being open from the first. V". arbareum forms an irregular shrub too diffuse and straggling to be of value except when planted in masses at the South. V. hirsutum is as beautiful in its autumn coloring as is V. corymbosum and, like that species, retains its foliage late in the season. V. Vitis-Idsra and V. uliginosum, with their shining box-like foliage, can be used very effectively as edging for the shrubbery border. (W. M. Munson.)
   −
For the most part, vacciniums are plants of peaty or sandy acid soil, and will not thrive in soils of a richer nature. Many species are very sensitive to the presence of lime, and they require special attention as to soil. See Blueberry.
+
For the most part, vacciniums are plants of peaty or sandy acid soil, and will not thrive in soils of a richer nature. Many species are very sensitive to the presence of lime, and they require special attention as to soil. See Blueberry.}}
    
==Cultivation==
 
==Cultivation==

Navigation menu