|
Buddleia "Miss Ruby" |
|
Buddleia "Peach Cobbler" |
|
Buddleia "Peach cobbler" |
I might have a love/hate thing going with
Buddleia. This winter/spring I bought and planted several. It took some effort to find the "legal", "horticulturally politically correct" varieties. By that I mean, legal to buy and grow, noninvasive, non-see bearing intergeneric hybrids. These are patented so can't be grown from cuttings.
My goal was to have a fast growing shrub with nectar bearing flowers for insects and hummingbirds. Especially honeybees.
Online photos of buddleia flowers are usually cropped or pruned to show the pretty, but not the ugly. There is a lot of pretty but also a lot of ugly.
As the flowers fade, they turn brown. They brown from the start to the end, over what seems to be a few weeks. That leaves a choice: Deadhead, which removes a lot of 'fresh' flower too, or leave the flower on the plant until it's totally brown, which is not attractive.
These photos show the "pretty", except for the bottom photo that shows the "ugly" too.
I will deadhead them. There should be lots of new flowers following deadheading.
In my garden, the "Cobbler" type buddleias ("Peach Cobbler" and "Blueberry Cobbler") seem to grow much faster and look more weedy, compared to the "Miss" type buddleias (Miss Molly and Miss Ruby). The flowers on the "Miss" buddleias are more compact and richer in color.
|
Buddleia "Blueberry Cobbler" |
Bumblebees often visit the buddleias. I haven't seen honeybees on them at all.
|
Buddleia "Peach Cobbler" |
Hummingbirds also visit them.