Weigela is a deciduous shrub of rounded habit and opposite oval leaves. This cold-hardy old-fashioned favorite is native to eastern Asia. 'Java Red' is an old variety also known as 'Foliis Purpureis'.
Every nursery keeps a working cap, the one that lives on the dashboard and comes back smelling of pine bark and potting mix. Ours wears an oak. Quercus has always been the South's way of keeping time, the tree you put in the ground for somebody you'll never meet, so it felt right to stitch one above the Woodlanders name.
Gift your loved ones the beauty of nature with the Woodlanders Gift Card. Perfect for plant lovers and avid gardeners, this card will bring a smile to their face and endless possibilities to their garden. Share the joy of gardening with a gift that keeps on giving!
Before there were nurseries there were glasshouses, and before glasshouses there was a single cutting kept alive under a bell of glass, carried across an ocean on the chance it might root. The front of this one is a nod to that older instinct, the one that says a plant worth having is a plant worth protecting: a specimen held in a glass vase, lit like it's the only one of its kind. Some days at the nursery, it is.
We first made these tees for our own crew at the nursery—something soft enough for long propagation days, sturdy enough to survive soil, sun, and the occasional splash from the hose. Now it’s your turn to wear the mark. Think of it as a modern field uniform for rare-plant people: understated, durable, and just nerdy enough for those who know their Schima from their Franklinia (and yes, we see you, Schimlinia fans).
A timeless favorite with a bright twist. Weigela florida 'Variegata' is a compact, deciduous shrub grown for two gifts at once: cream-edged, softly variegated foliage and a late-spring flood of deep rose-pink, trumpet-shaped flowers. The genus honors the German botanist Christian Ehrenfried Weigel, and the species florida, meaning flowering, ranges as a wild plant through northern China, Korea, and Japan.
There are few sights more stirring than a wisteria in bloom, and 'Amethyst Falls' offers all the romance without the unruly habits of the Asian cousins. This refined selection of the native American wisteria, Wisteria frutescens, pours out cascades of fragrant, lavender-violet blossoms in late spring, with smaller flushes through summer, a soft echo of springtime returning again and again.
For the first sixty-five years in the books, this vine was filed as a kind of soybean. Linnaeus named the plant Glycine frutescens in 1753, frutescens meaning turning shrubby, and there the classification sat until 1818, when Thomas Nuttall looked again, decided a woody climber of the southern riverbanks deserved a genus apart, and named the vine for his friend Caspar Wistar, the Philadelphia anatomist. Somewhere between the man and the plant a vowel slipped, Wistar becoming Wisteria, and the misspelling has outlived everyone involved.
Some years ago the late Lynn Lowery, a pioneer of Texas native plants, found a fine selection of native wisteria near the dam of an East Texas reservoir. The dam was known as Dam-B, and Lynn gave that name to the plant, though some contend the true name was Damn Bee. Woodlanders thanks Dr. David Creech of Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, Texas, for the start of this and several other fine plants.
A rare white form of the well-behaved native. Wisteria frutescens var. nivea is a twining, woody, deciduous vine with compound leaves and short clusters of pure white flowers that open with the foliage, far less rampant than the common Asian wisterias and, in white, a genuine rarity. This form was virtually unknown to American gardeners until Woodlanders brought the plant into the trade.
The white form of the latest-blooming native. Wisteria macrostachya 'Clara Mack' is a twining, deciduous Kentucky wisteria with compound leaves and long, hanging clusters of pure white flowers, a splendid white version of a species normally blue. The racemes run longer and open later than those of the other native, Wisteria frutescens, extending the native wisteria season.
Join the ranks of discerning plant lovers with the first official, modern piece of Woodlanders merchandise. This premium cotton hat is equal parts utility and quiet allegiance—a nod to those who know their Schima from their Franklinia (and perhaps know about the the Schimlinia too). Wear it out in the field, at the market, or wherever rare plants are appreciated.