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Dwarf witch alder 'Mt. Airy'
Fothergilla gardenii / Dwarf Witch Alder at the Sarah P. Duke Gardens at Duke University in Durham, NC
fothergilla gardenii
April’s garden. All things white
Sometimes you wander the garden and see things that you should have noticed before, but somehow just failed to look hard enough. I had forgotten that we had planted some white erythronium, far classier than the yellow “pagoda” in my opinion. But there they are, nestled among the leaves of the dicentra that is just about to flower. So I took the camera and snapped what I thought looked good. The operfect centres of the white daffodils, the michelia that is just starting to blossom. It is having to fight for space among other plants but seems happy where it is. And the clematis montana has just started to blossom too; it is easy to look at the overall effect and ignore how lovely each flower is. Finally the fothergilla is frothy and beautiful too.

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Strange blooms.
Plant of the Day Friday 21 April 2017
A member of the Hamamelidaceae family Fothergilla major (mountain witch alder) forms a rounded deciduous shrub. Here it was lighting up an edge of woodland setting with spiky white flowers. This plant favours humus-rich, moist but well-drained acid soil in sun or partial shade. The ovate dark green leaves turn brilliant colours in autumn.
Jill Raggett
fothergillas are a great native (( to the southern states )) shrub that grows well in New England.