Quantcast
Channel: Shelterpop
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1501

April Flowers: What's Blooming?

$
0
0

Filed under: , , ,

April is full of rain, but it's also full of beautiful flowers. Here's a guide to what's blooming this month.

Spring has arrived in this USDA Zone 7 neck of the woods, as warmer weather makes its way slowly north. And choosing just a handful of flowering trees to highlight for this month is like trying to choose your favorite child -- It's difficult and a little risky.

april flowersKanzan cherries at The Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Photo: Marie Viljoen


With Hanami Festivals scheduled all over the country, it is impossible not to talk about cherry blossoms. Hanami is the Japanese tradition that celebrates every moment of cherry blossom bloom, from the opening of its earliest flowers to the falling of the very last petals.

The lush and frilly flowers of Prunus "Kanzan" are the best known of ornamental cherries. But it's the earlier, more delicate cherry blossoms that tug at my wintered-out, blossom-starved heart strings. Pale pink Prunus x yedoensis, rose-colored Prunus "Okame" and magical Prunus subhirtella, which blooms in late fall and again in spring, bring a lump to my throat. Keep in mind, if you want to grow these beauties, that cherries require full sun.

april flowersPrunus x yedoensis in Central Park. Photo: Marie Viljoen

April is magnolia month in the northeast. Their silky, sheathed buds are a hint of what's to come for much of late winter, and by mid-month, the trees have exploded in fat-petaled profusion. Early-blooming star magnolia (Magnolia stellata), with its supple white or pale pink starburst petals, is helpfully adaptable and will flower well in dappled shade as well as full sun.

april flowersMagnolias in bloom in April. Photo: Marie Viljoen


It is smaller than its saucer magnolia (Magnolia x soulangeana) counterpart, which needs room to move. With over 125 species and dozens of magnolia cultivars with flowers shifting from white to pink to yellow to deep mauve, choosing just one for your garden is either a torture or a treat. If you are lucky you will have room for more. Have I mentioned that they are scented?

april flowersBurgundy-flowered crabapple in April. Photo: Marie Viljoen

One of my favorite small trees is the crabapple (Malus species and cultivars). Their distinctive tangle of branches within an elegantly rounded top combine wildness with order, a compelling recipe for life and beauty in a tree. Crabapple blossoms are cup-shaped and profuse, and range from pure white to pink-flushed to burgundy-red. The buds open once the trees have fully leafed-out giving them an even fluffier appearance. Hardy, wind-tolerant and very pretty, all crabapples ask is that they are planted in full sun.

april flowersLilac in bloom in late April. Photo: Marie Viljoen


Of all the scents in the world of flowers, one of the most loved is that of lilac (Syringa species and cultivars). In my fantasies I sometimes plant an entire hedge of lilac, and wish more people would. The world would be a better place. Their panicles of minute flowers are rich with perfume and hang heavily from their slender branches late in the month. White, pale pink, lilac, purple and blue, from modest shrubs to small trees, lilacs can be planted as part of a border or as stand alone specimens. They do not like acidic soil, and require full sun for best bloom.


april flowersJuneberry blossoms. Photo: Marie Viljoen

Native to the Northeast, Juneberry (Amelanchier canadensis or A. arborea) is a choice addition to a garden that values many seasons of interest. From their white froth of blossoms to their sweet red berries ripening in June, to the deep orange of their fall foliage, this is one of the most rewarding plants I know. Grow in dappled shade or full sun, and harvest the berries in early summer for delicious pies or jellies.

I could go on, but I have to stop somewhere. Planting a tree to ensure blooms in every month turns your garden into a botanical calendar, telling the time as surely as a clock. And watching a clock was never such fun, or as good for the planet.

Turning the clock back, check out our flowers for February and March.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1501

Trending Articles