Toward the end of summer, visitors arriving in the North Ridge Parking Lot
are greeted with the light, jasmine-like scent drifting from the
blossoms of the Heptacodium miconides
(Seven-Son Flower). This deciduous shrub, or small tree, thrives in
the partial sun near the Basalt Rock Outcrop and is notable in
September for its cluster of small, creamy-white flowers.
First collected in 1907 by E.H. Wilson during a Chinese expedition,
it lived in anonymity until his colleague, Alfred Rehder, named it
in 1916. Hepticodum miconides was then forgotten until
1980 when another expedition to China resulted in viable seeds and
cuttings that were distributed by the Arnold Arboretum and the U.S.
National Arboretum. Since then, it has grown in popularity.
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The
glossy, green leaves emerge in May on this member of the Caprifoliaceae
(Honeysuckle) family and maintain their beauty throughout the
season. The small tree or shrub reaches 15 to 25 feet with a spread
up to 12 feet and prefers full sun. The name Heptacodium
refers to the flowers which grow in seven-branch clusters.
While the flowers make a beautiful display in late summer, the Hepticodium
miconides continues to
provide visual interest in the garden year-round. As an
encore to its summer blooms, the calyces, which are a delicate pink
color in late summer, turn a bright cherry red in the fall, once
the flowers are spent. During the winter, the light brown bark
exfoliates in strips, revealing a rich brown color below. Admiring
the Hepticodium's transition from summer to
fall is a wonderful reason to plan multiple visits to
Greenwood Gardens in the coming months.
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Greenwood
Gardens
274 Old Short Hills Road
Short Hills, NJ 07078
Phone: 973.258.4026
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