Fiery flowers, ancient fruit, and real toughness. Pomegranates give a Southern garden brilliant orange-red bloom all summer, handsome fruit in fall, and the kind of heat and drought tolerance that turns a hard, sunny corner into an asset.
Punica granatum 'California Sunset' turns the pomegranate into something closer to a florist's confection. The flowers arrive fully double, coral to salmon-red and streaked with creamy white, each one fluted and ruffled like an old boutonniere carnation rather than the tidy scarlet trumpet of the wild species. Because the petals are packed so tightly, the flowers rarely set fruit, which is precisely the point: this is a pomegranate grown for the long parade of bloom from early summer into fall, not for the leathery globes at the end of the season.
There are pomegranates grown for fruit, and pomegranates grown for flowers, and then there is 'Eight Ball', grown for sheer astonishment. Where the species bears globes the color of garnets, Punica granatum 'Eight Ball' ripens fruit so dark, round, and dusky that the pomegranates look dipped in coal, closer to the ball the cultivar is named for than to anything in the produce aisle. The color runs bone-deep: the fruit is so loaded with anthocyanin pigment that even the cambium beneath the bark shows purple.
Hardiness
Zones 7–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
8–10 ft.
Spread
6–8 ft.
Bloom
Orange
Plant type
Shrub
Traditional use
digestive health, heart support, general wellness, topical applications
Punica granatum 'Toyosho' answers a question few think to ask of a pomegranate: what if the flower, not the fruit, were the whole point? The blooms are fully double and carnation-like, as much as three inches across, in warm shades of peach, apricot, and soft salmon, with the crimped, tissue-paper texture of an old-fashioned boutonniere. So many petals crowd each flower that pollination becomes nearly impossible, so 'Toyosho' seldom fruits, spending the long summer instead in an unhurried procession of bloom.
This is the pomegranate grown the old way, for the fruit. Punica granatum is a deciduous Middle Eastern shrub of narrow, glossy leaves and vivid orange-red flowers, followed by the large, leathery-skinned, garnet-seeded fruits for which the plant has been cultivated since antiquity. Woodlanders raised this particular selection from seed of a good fruiting specimen in upstate South Carolina, and the plant may well represent 'Wonderful', the widely grown commercial variety, proven here as a dependable cropper in the southern garden.
Hardiness
Zones 8–10
Light
Full Sun
Height
10–12 ft.
Spread
6–8 ft.
Bloom
Orange
Plant type
Shrub
Traditional use
digestive health, heart support, general wellness, topical applications