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Plant Profile: Mahonia - eight brilliant examples!!

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  • Опубліковано 17 сер 2024
  • This week on The Horti-culturalists we're taking a closer look at a wonderful group of winter flowering plants, the Mahonias! And yes, they are all now called Berberis but we'll stick to the name Mahonia for the purpose of this video! Stephen has eight different examples in his garden each with a slightly different flowering time, habit and foliage so we'll be taking a look at each one and hopefully giving you an idea of which type might work for you and your garden. And although most are winter flowering with gorgeous yellow blooms, we'll also look at a particularly rare Asian species that flowers in mid summer and has pink flowers!
    We've made a Plant Profile video about Berberis which you can see here: • Plant Profile: Berberi...
    The plants we name in this video are:
    Mahonia x media 'Buckland'
    Mahonia lomariifolia now Mahonia oiwakensis
    Mahonia x media 'woodbank'
    Mahonia bealei
    Mahonia aquifolium 'Moseri'
    Mahonia nervosa
    Mahoberberis aquisargentii
    Mahonia gracilipes

КОМЕНТАРІ • 48

  • @sannaericditsler4034
    @sannaericditsler4034 Місяць тому +1

    You guys are so funny. Thanks for the video. Very interesting.

  • @TheindooroutdooroasisGardener
    @TheindooroutdooroasisGardener Місяць тому +1

    I purchased an excellent mahonia from your nursery two years ago. It’s absolutely thrived and is now flowering.

  • @svetlanasgardenhomeofredwa4342
    @svetlanasgardenhomeofredwa4342 Місяць тому +1

    Thank you! I'm getting the M. gracilipes as I'm watching your video! Found it here in an oregon nursery!!

  • @jamesandjudithentwistle1235
    @jamesandjudithentwistle1235 Місяць тому +3

    Loved this .. also thanks for your talk at Wangaratta yesterday

  • @nerinat8371
    @nerinat8371 Місяць тому +3

    The flowers are stunning 🤩 thanks for an informative video

  • @andrewdenny87
    @andrewdenny87 Місяць тому +2

    Thanks for another great informative video. Always my favourite thing to watch on a Friday night.

  • @MDA-rs4uf
    @MDA-rs4uf Місяць тому +1

    I have a few evergreen berberis that have great fragrance in late winter here in southeast US..they make good hedging plants but with a kind of wicked nature from spines on the branches. The pollinators love them...Have you seen "soft caress" ??? It is the best cultivar in my opinion. I'm sure you could grow it because cold here can kill it.

    • @thehorti-culturalists
      @thehorti-culturalists  Місяць тому

      Soft Caress isn't in Australia unfortunately but I'm sure I could grow it if I could get it. Regards Stephen

    • @MDA-rs4uf
      @MDA-rs4uf Місяць тому +1

      It was very popular here in the SE until a "normal" winter came along and killed off many of them...I guess we push the limits too often...

  • @scallywags12
    @scallywags12 Місяць тому +1

    Good video! Have you heard of the new Soft Cress Mahonia bred in US now available? Yet to find it here in BC, Canada. It has smooth leaves.

    • @thehorti-culturalists
      @thehorti-culturalists  Місяць тому +1

      I've seen it in Europe but alas it hasn't made it to Australia. Regards Stephen

  • @salpalvv
    @salpalvv Місяць тому +3

    We have Mahonia/Berberis bealei and it spreads prolifically from seed. Every year, in early May, in NE Georgia, US, Cedar waxwing descend and eat all the berries left within a few days. It almost sounds like a light rain as they defecate in large numbers, spreading the seeds. Perhaps your birds are getting to the berries before they are fully ripe and so aren't viable yet. I notice, while eating the berries, that the seeds don't darken, and I assume mature fully, until the berries are quite ripe.

    • @rossmcleod7983
      @rossmcleod7983 Місяць тому +1

      Bealei seeds for me too here in Southern Oz, not that far from Stephen Ryan’s place. Not that prolifically though.

    • @thehorti-culturalists
      @thehorti-culturalists  Місяць тому +1

      Different climates and predators make for different results and certainly Mahonias have shown no sign of spreading around me in my 40 year of growing them. Regards Stephen

  • @jlee4304
    @jlee4304 Місяць тому +3

    Brilliant episode, I have 4 Mahonia media in my garden flowers november till January and after discovering the berries are edible we pick them from April early spring till June really the first edible ripe fruit of the year I don't know if the berries of all species are edible but I've eaten many from the various varieties growing in england. I usually cook them lightly and make a juice with water and honey added, They have a rich flavour not sweet some varieties have nicer fruit than others.

    • @thehorti-culturalists
      @thehorti-culturalists  Місяць тому +1

      Intersting to read your comments one edibility but I rarely find a ripe berry due to our voracious birds. Regards Stephen

    • @sunenielsen2686
      @sunenielsen2686 Місяць тому +1

      I am interested in knowing what type you find have the nicest fruit? And earliest? I love growing unusual fruitplants here in Denmark.

    • @jlee4304
      @jlee4304 Місяць тому +2

      The variety's that flower earliest provide the earliest fruit so for me that's a form of Mahonia Media x ( winter sun ) flowers November till January fruit April till June in the northern hemisphere, but if winter has prolonged periods below freezing around negative 5 during flowing you start to see a reduction in fruit set. Winters are often mild here in mid England rarely dropping below negative 1 so usually we get a good fruit set and you need some days warm enough for pollinators to be out during autumn/winter I regularly see bees on the Mahonia if the temps are above 5c. The fruit of hybrid Media x winter Sun are the nicest I've tried but let them ripen fully then pluck the whole bunch if possible. I've found spring flowering varieties like Mahonia Aquifolium which ripen fruit late summer have a harsher tarter flavour.

    • @sunenielsen2686
      @sunenielsen2686 Місяць тому +1

      @@jlee4304 Thank you :). I just found out that I can buy Winter Sun here in Denmark, so I will try that. Came to my mind that I had thought of that, but did not know if it was possible with any real useful fruitset. Winters here can probably be colder than in your place, but we can also have mild ones

  • @h0llytr0n
    @h0llytr0n Місяць тому +1

    Another fab video! I recently took a chance buying a Mahonia 'volcano' and 'cabaret', could not find much info at all on either.. but hopefully i can always prune them if they get unweildly! 🤞

  • @davereed2500
    @davereed2500 Місяць тому +1

    One of my favorite plants. Unfortunately, mahonia is now reviled in the US as an invasive. I see a very occasional seedling of M. bealei in forests neighboring residences, but not in numbers to be concerning. I see no seedlings from handfuls of hybrids in my garden or other mahonias. My only complaint about mahonia is the many wounds inflicted by the spiky old growth leaves that are shed. Almost as bad as monkey puzzle, but the mahonias are worth the suffering.

    • @thehorti-culturalists
      @thehorti-culturalists  Місяць тому

      I agree with you about their value and usually try to send the under gardener in to weed around them. Regards Stephen

  • @dewdan11dnd46
    @dewdan11dnd46 Місяць тому +2

    💞👍Thank for sharing. Do birds and insects, help to pollinate/fertilise the Mahonia? I’ve got a suspect, emerging in the garden and I have suspicions, as its leaves are looking holly/mahonia esq. it’s very small, in two localised areas of the garden and I daren’t pull it up, in case it’s not a weed!
    Cheers 🫶

    • @thehorti-culturalists
      @thehorti-culturalists  Місяць тому +1

      they do both pollinate the Mahonias and it could be seedlings in your garden so wait and see. Regards Stephen

  • @joanp105
    @joanp105 Місяць тому +3

    Will you explain what it is about all these Mahonias/Berberis that puts them into this species. I cannot understand what puts the Mahonia gracilipis into this species. Also, what organization has the authority to put plant species into new categories and to change the names of plants we have known for so long all over the world?

    • @thehorti-culturalists
      @thehorti-culturalists  Місяць тому +5

      The fact that DNA can be studied is the main reason for plant name changes as this proves relationships that can't be observed with the naked eye and it isn't a personal insult to the home gardener. The flowers of all Mahonia and Berberis are Identical and the compound leaves of the Mahonias has proven not to be enough to keep them in seperate Genera. Regards Stephen

    • @juliashearer7842
      @juliashearer7842 Місяць тому

      ​@@thehorti-culturalistsI understand the reason for names changes but they are coming a bit too thick and fast for me! 😅

  • @yukismum5141
    @yukismum5141 Місяць тому +1

    Hi from Dunedin New Zealand - how hard can i prune a hebe hedge

    • @thehorti-culturalists
      @thehorti-culturalists  Місяць тому +1

      It depends a bit on the Hebe but I wouldn’t usually prune back beyond the foliage for safety. Regards Stephen

  • @jeanneclark99
    @jeanneclark99 Місяць тому +2

    Why did you pull down the video about Ellis Rowan?

    • @thehorti-culturalists
      @thehorti-culturalists  Місяць тому

      The Australian Club wasn't happy with it.

    • @jeanneclark99
      @jeanneclark99 Місяць тому +2

      @@thehorti-culturalists Oh, good grief. It was a lovely video, I thought.

    • @julesrogers4095
      @julesrogers4095 Місяць тому +3

      What a shame. We really don’t hear enough about women who have contributed so much to our country. Thank for the video about Ellis Rogan, I thought it wonderful. Julie from Toowoomba.

  • @joanne-et6pm
    @joanne-et6pm Місяць тому

    Hi Stephen wonder if mahonia would survive GC weather ?

  • @brocktoon8
    @brocktoon8 Місяць тому +1

    I wish they'd stop renaming everything. It will always be Mahonia to me!

    • @thehorti-culturalists
      @thehorti-culturalists  Місяць тому

      Wrong attitude! The names will change despite you and it could be taken as a challenge to learn the new ones. Regards Stephen

    • @brocktoon8
      @brocktoon8 Місяць тому

      @@thehorti-culturalists Hmmm . . . but how will I be a curmudgeon then?! 😂

  • @chitrabhakta3820
    @chitrabhakta3820 Місяць тому +1

    What about Berberis Nevenii? Also a slow grower and a great bird plant.