Birds & Blooms on MSN
Burning Bush Plants: What Gardeners Need to Know
Burning bush plants are known for red fall foliage, but the seeds invade natural areas. Grow a sterile cultivar or a native shrub instead.
Very little in nature is purely black or white or strictly good or bad. The current heightened interest in native plants is a great example of this phenomenon as most gardeners currently seek out ...
Now that the colorful autumn leaves have fallen, we can see deep into the woods and spot things that were hidden earlier in the season. The other day, I saw a bush with pink leaves in our wooded area.
The red berries of burning bush are eaten by birds and spread from landscape to natural areas, where this non-native, invasive shrub can take over and crowd out native plants. The red berries of ...
Lehigh Valley Live on MSN
Woolly bear caterpillars: The truth behind the winter weather folklore | Lehigh Valley Nature Watch
The weather has finally cooled off, but in the middle of this past week spring violets were blooming in the front yard. And not far away from them a big burning bush (Euonymus alatus), a shrub ...
Burning bush – a widely planted landscape shrub popular for its fire-engine-red fall foliage – has been deemed invasive by the state Department of Agriculture and will be phased out of sale in ...
Looking out my dining room windows is a painting, one I have painted in different seasons, at different times of the day, through windows, or from outside. Today it is a wildness, a thicket of fiery ...
URBANA — Some years ago, it was shocking to learn that one of my favorite ornamental shrubs, burning bush (Euonymus alatus), is invasive. It took a while for this news to sink in, and after seeing it ...
GOLDEN VALLEY, Minn. — A fan favorite for it's fall color, burning bush will takes it's place on the restricted list for Minnesota noxious weeds come January. The long process of evaluating winged ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results