Flowers In A February Garden
By Ray Novitske, Fairfax Master Gardener
Let me introduce you to a shrub that is blooming right now throughout our area. When I moved here from New York State, I was surprised to see a neighbor’s bushes blooming their hearts out in the middle of February’s snow. I later learned it was Winter Jasmine (Jasminum nudiflorum).
This plant, native to northern China, is a member of the Olive family (Oleaceae). This family of plants is University of Delaware centered around the Mediterranean (where olives
come from) and extends east through Asia. But, unlike photo: some other notable members of this family like jasmine, olive and lilac, Winter Jasmine flowers have no fragrance.
Is it evergreen or deciduous? It is both. The stems are green throughout the year, but the plant loses its leaves in the winter, and they don’t appear in spring until it is finished blooming. The six-petal yellow flowers arrive in late winter on arching slender branches and look like forsythia. One distinction between it and forsythia is that it blooms over a longer time period, unlike forsythia where most all the flowers come out at the same time.
The shrub can be left to its own devices to sprawl and
amble around the ground, or be trimmed into a shrub. It
Amanda Slate: Creative is also often trained to climb up a trellis or arbor. As a shrub, it grows to about 4 feet in height, and can reach up to 10 feet if trained on an arbor or trellis. Like photo: Commons forsythia, its cousin, it can grow out of control. Conscientious pruning in spring after blooming is required to keep the plant from spreading where it is not welcome.
Winter Jasmine is hardy in zones 6-10, so it is at home in our Zone 7. It prefers full sun to partial
shade and rich moist soils, But, this is one tough shrub, making a comfortable home in our heavy clay soils and at the same time is drought tolerant. It has no serious insect or disease problems, although Japanese beetles will occasionally take a nibble or two. Deer do not find it appetizing, either. University of Delaware At one time, my neighbor’s plant was referred to as Winter Jessamine. But it is not this. Winter
Jessamine or Carolina Jessamine (Gelsemium photo: sempervirens) is a somewhat evergreen native to Winter Jasmine trained as shrub
Fairfax County Master Gardeners Association, Inc. | © 2018 North America, but has similar flowers and bloom time as Winter Jasmine. However, its stems are not green, and its growth is more vine-like.
If you are looking for a deer-resistant shrub that flowers in a season when deer are most hungry, try this Chinese shrub.
References Winter Jasmine, Virginia Tech Dendrology Jasminum nudiflorum, NC State Extension Jasminum nudiflorum, US Department of Agriculture Shrubs Reference Desk, University of Arkansas, Cooperative Extension Service
Fairfax County Master Gardeners Association, Inc. | © 2019