Small & Medium Shrubs

The shrubs that furnish a garden. Small and medium shrubs are the versatile, human-scaled woody plants that fill borders, edge paths, and knit the taller structure to the ground, the layer most gardens rely on most.

198 plants in this collection

№ 021
Ilex glabra 'Leucocarpa', white-fruited inkberry, ivory-white berries against smooth spineless dark green evergreen leaves
White-fruited Inkberry
Ilex glabra 'Leucocarpa'White-fruited Inkberry

Ilex glabra 'Leucocarpa' is the white-berried surprise among the inkberries, a native evergreen holly that trades the usual near-black fruit for berries of clean ivory white. On the ordinary inkberry the dark berries all but vanish against the deep green leaves, but here the pale fruit stands out cleanly and holds on the branches from fall right through to spring, a quiet, unexpected show in the winter garden.

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
4–5 ft.
Spread
3–4 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$27.00In stock
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№ 022
Ilex verticillata 'Red Sprite', dwarf winterberry, heavy clusters of scarlet berries on bare deciduous stems in winter
Winterberry Holly 'Red Sprite'
Ilex verticillata 'Red Sprite'Winterberry Holly 'Red Sprite'

Ilex verticillata 'Red Sprite' is winterberry shrunk to garden size and cranked up in intensity. Where much of the landscape fades to gray, this compact native holly turns into a beacon, the bare stems packed with heavy clusters of large, glossy scarlet berries that color in fall and cling deep into winter, a living ember at the pond's edge or against fresh snow.

Hardiness
Zones 4–8
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
3–5 ft.
Spread
3–4 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$22.00In stock
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№ 023
Ilex verticillata 'Southern Gentleman', male winterberry, upright deciduous shrub grown as a late-blooming pollinizer
Winterberry Holly 'Southern Gentleman'
Ilex verticillata 'Southern Gentleman'Winterberry Holly 'Southern Gentleman'

Every winterberry covered in red is hiding a secret, and his name is 'Southern Gentleman'. Winterberry hollies are dioecious, male and female on separate plants, and only the pollinated females set the blazing red fruit the species is grown for. No male nearby, no berries. 'Southern Gentleman' is the male who makes the show possible, and asks for none of the credit.

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
6–8 ft.
Spread
6–8 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00In stock
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№ 024
Ilex 'Sparkleberry', hybrid winterberry, abundant bright red berries on tall bare deciduous stems
Sparkleberry Winterberry (female)
Ilex verticillata x serrata 'Sparkleberry'Sparkleberry Winterberry (female)

Ilex 'Sparkleberry' is the aristocrat of the winterberries, a vigorous hybrid holly bred from the native winterberry, Ilex verticillata, and the Japanese winterberry, Ilex serrata, and introduced by the U.S. National Arboretum. The cross brought hybrid vigor and a heavier, longer-holding crop: tall, upright stems that shed their leaves in fall and blaze with bright red fruit, persisting so well that the berries often hang on into spring.

Hardiness
Zones 5–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
10–12 ft.
Spread
6–8 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00In stock
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№ 025
Indigofera incarnata Chinese indigo, a low spreading legume with soft pink pea flowers over ferny foliage.
Chinese Indigo
Indigofera incarnataChinese Indigo

The genus is the one that turned the Lowcountry blue. Indigofera gave colonial South Carolina its great cash crop alongside rice, the dye that Eliza Lucas Pinckney coaxed into commercial cultivation around Charleston in the 1740s and that filled the colony's coffers for a generation, made with skill drawn largely from enslaved West Africans. That fortune rested on a tropical cousin, Indigofera tinctoria, but the family trait runs through the whole genus, and the leaves of this one will give up the same blue if you care to steep them. We grow the plant for the flowers instead.

Hardiness
Zones 6–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
1–2 ft.
Spread
3–4 ft.
Bloom
Pink
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00In stock
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№ 026
Indigofera incarnata 'Alba' white Chinese indigo, a low spreading legume with small white pea flowers over ferny foliage.
White Chinese Indigo 'Alba'
Indigofera incarnata 'Alba'White Chinese Indigo 'Alba'

No genus carries more Carolina history in its name than this one. Indigofera means indigo-bearing, and indigo was the blue that built the colonial Lowcountry: in the 1740s a young Eliza Lucas Pinckney coaxed a successful crop out of the land around Charleston, and for a generation the dye stood second only to rice among the colony's exports, made with skill drawn largely from enslaved West Africans, until the Revolution cut the British bounty and the fields went quiet. The plant that did that work was Indigofera tinctoria.

Hardiness
Zones 6–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
1–2 ft.
Spread
3–4 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00In stock
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№ 027
Lespedeza thunbergii 'Spring Grove' bush clover, arching stems hung with rose-purple pea flowers
Thunberg Bush Clover
Lespedeza thunbergii 'Spring Grove'Thunberg Bush Clover

By late summer, when many shrubs have said their piece, Lespedeza thunbergii 'Spring Grove' is only clearing its throat. The many woody, arching stems bend into a green fountain through the season, then bow lower still under a long, generous fall of rose-purple pea flowers carried in racemes six to eight inches long. 'Spring Grove' is a newer selection said to hold darker purple flowers and a tidier, better habit than the old standard 'Gibraltar', and the photographs here come courtesy of the JC Raulston Arboretum.

Hardiness
Zones 5–8
Light
Full Sun
Height
4–5 ft.
Spread
4–5 ft.
Bloom
Purple
Plant type
Shrub
$20.00In stock
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№ 028
Malvaviscus drummondii small Turk's cap, furled bright red flower that never opens flat
Small Turk's-cap
Malvaviscus drummondiiSmall Turk's-cap

Malvaviscus drummondii is the small Turk's cap, the wild, native cousin of the larger Mexican wax mallow and, for many Southern gardeners, the better plant of the two. A relative of the hibiscus in the mallow family, Malvaceae, this shrubby perennial is native to Texas, the Gulf Coast states, and on south, and grows wild in the dappled shade of woodland edges and stream banks where few other bright flowers will bloom.

Hardiness
Zones 7–11
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
3–6 ft.
Spread
4–6 ft.
Bloom
Red
Plant type
Shrub
$20.00In stock
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№ 029
Morella pumila dwarf waxmyrtle, low aromatic evergreen groundcover of small leaves
Dwarf Waxmyrtle
Morella pumilaDwarf Waxmyrtle

Morella pumila is the dwarf waxmyrtle, a low, native evergreen that keeps everything gardeners love about the common wax myrtle, aromatic foliage, waxy berries, and a tough constitution, and shrinks it all to knee height. Native to the frequently burned pinelands of the southern United States, the plant is an adaptation to that fiery world, staying small and spreading slowly into dense patches and colonies by underground runners.

Hardiness
Zones 7–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
1–2 ft.
Spread
2–3 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Groundcover
$25.00In stock
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№ 030
Odontonema callistachyum purple firespike, erect amethyst flower spike above glossy green foliage
Purple Firespike
Odontonema callistachyumPurple Firespike

The purple firespike answers a quiet complaint of the warm-climate gardener, that the tropical border runs to reds and hot corals and forgets the cooler end of the spectrum. Odontonema callistachyum carries erect spikes of tubular, lavender-to-amethyst flowers at the tip of nearly every branch, each spike lengthening to almost a foot as the buds open in succession from fall into spring. The genus name joins the Greek odous, a tooth, with nema, a thread, for the small toothed filaments within the bloom, while the epithet callistachyum means, simply and accurately, beautiful spike. The leaves are broad, glossy, and faintly fleshy, a lacquered dark green that holds the plant together as a handsome mound even between flushes.

Hardiness
Zones 8–11
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
5–6 ft.
Spread
3–4 ft.
Bloom
Purple
Plant type
Shrub
$18.00In stock
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№ 031
Pittosporum tobira 'Variegata', variegated mock orange, cream-edged gray-green foliage.
Variegated Japanese Mock Orange
Pittosporum tobira 'Variegata'Variegated Japanese Mock Orange

In Japan they call the shrub tobira, short for tobira no ki, the door tree, because the cut branches were hung in the doorway at Setsubun to turn back demons at the threshold of spring. The broken wood smells rank, which was rather the point: bad spirits, like most of us, would rather not walk through a bad smell. The genus name is kinder and more exact, pitta and sporos, pitch and seed, for the resin that coats the black seeds and glues them to whatever bird carries them off.

Hardiness
Zones 8–11
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
4–6 ft.
Spread
4–6 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00In stock
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№ 032
Polygala x dalmaisiana, sweet pea shrub, purplish-pink orchid-like flowers.
Sweet Pea Shrub
Polygala x dalmaisianaSweet Pea Shrub

Polygala x dalmaisiana, the sweet pea shrub, is a fast-growing evergreen hybrid of two South African species (P. oppositifolia and P. myrtifolia), grown for a nearly year-round show of orchid-like flowers on an open, informal frame.

Hardiness
Zones 8–10
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
3–5 ft.
Spread
2–3 ft.
Bloom
Purple
Plant type
Shrub
$23.00In stock
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№ 033
Rosa 'Old Blush' China rose, clusters of soft semi-double pink flowers.
China Rose 'Old Blush'
Rosa sp. ‘Old Blush’China Rose 'Old Blush'

Nearly every rose in your garden that blooms more than once a year owes a debt to this one. 'Old Blush' is a China rose, bred in China for something close to a thousand years and known there as the monthly pink, and they are generally reckoned the first East Asian rose to reach Europe, recorded in Sweden by 1752 and offered in England as Parson's Pink China in 1793. They brought with them the one thing Western roses simply did not have: the habit of blooming again and again across the season rather than once and done. Crossed into the old European roses, that single trait rewrote the genus. On the Ile Bourbon they met an autumn damask and produced the Bourbons; in Charleston, just down the road, the rice planter John Champneys crossed them with a musk rose and produced the first Noisette, the only rose class born in the American South. Bourbons, Noisettes, hybrid perpetuals, and in time the hybrid teas all trace back through this unassuming pink shrub. 'Old Blush' could have retired on the legacy and instead just kept flowering. In the South they are very nearly everblooming, throwing clusters of soft semi-double pink that, in the China way, deepen rather than fade in the sun, blush going to rose as each flower ages. The canes are nearly thornless, the constitution famously tough; these are the roses you still find blooming alone at abandoned homesteads, having outlived the house and the gardener both. Grow them for the flowers. Know that you are also growing the root of the whole modern family.

Hardiness
Zones 7–9
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
3–6 ft.
Spread
3–5 ft.
Bloom
Pink
Plant type
Shrub
$21.00In stock
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№ 034
Rosmarinus officinalis rosemary, needle-like evergreen foliage and soft blue flowers.
Common Rosemary
Rosmarinus officinalisCommon Rosemary

Rosemary is a timeless classic in both the garden and the kitchen, an aromatic evergreen shrub of the sun-baked Mediterranean coast, so distinctive that botanists long kept rosemary in a genus apart, Rosmarinus officinalis, before recent study moved the herb into the sages as Salvia rosmarinus. The old genus name means dew of the sea, for the plant's love of bright, salt-swept coastal hillsides. Slender, needle-like, deep green leaves clothe the woody stems the year round, and soft blue flowers open along them from winter into spring.

Hardiness
Zones 7–10
Light
Full Sun
Height
2–4 ft.
Spread
2–3 ft.
Bloom
Blue
Plant type
Shrub
Traditional use
digestive health, mental & emotional well-being, general wellness, topical applications
$23.00In stock
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№ 035
Salix koriyanagi 'Rubykins' ruby catkins in opposite pairs on bare spring stems
Korean Basket Willow
Salix koriyanagi ‘Rubykins’Korean Basket Willow

The willows gave the world its first painkiller. Willow bark, steeped by Greek and Native American healers alike for fever and ache, carries salicin, the compound nineteenth-century chemists refined into salicylic acid and, in time, aspirin, which still wears the genus name buried in the chemistry. This particular willow comes by a quieter trade. Salix koriyanagi is the Korean basket willow, the name meaning just that, long grown across Korea, Japan, and China for slender rods woven into baskets and furniture by hands that wanted something straight, supple, and strong.

Hardiness
Zones 5–7
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
3–6 ft.
Spread
3–6 ft.
Bloom
Red
Plant type
Shrub
Traditional use
pain relief, general wellness
$26.00In stock
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№ 036
Sarcandra glabra (grass coral) glossy serrated leaves with clusters of coral-red berries
Grass Coral
Sarcandra glabraGrass Coral

This plant is a botanical time machine. Sarcandra glabra belongs to the Chloranthaceae, a flowering-plant family with only four surviving genera worldwide and a fossil record reaching back into the Early Cretaceous, more than a hundred million years ago. Pollen and floral fossils of the Chloranthaceae are among the earliest evidence of flowering plants anywhere on Earth, and the family was already abundant when the dinosaurs were only in their middle age. Today Sarcandra is one of just four genera left from a lineage that once spread across what is now Portugal, Spain, and eastern North America, and most of that Cretaceous diversity is gone. The little plant in the garden is a quiet survivor of a family that mostly did not make it.

Hardiness
Zones 8–9
Light
Part Shade / Full Shade
Height
1–2 ft.
Spread
1–2 ft.
Bloom
Yellow
Plant type
Groundcover
Traditional use
pain relief, respiratory support, topical applications
$23.00In stock
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№ 037
Senecio confusus (Mexican flame vine), clusters of orange-red daisy-like flowers on a climbing vine
Mexican Flame Vine
Senecio confususMexican Flame Vine

Senecio confusus, commonly known as the Mexican Flame Vine, hails from the warm, sun-soaked regions of Mexico and Central America. This vibrant climbing vine has been cherished for generations, not only for a striking appearance but also for resilience and versatility in various landscapes.

Hardiness
Zones 8–10
Light
Full Sun
Height
8–12 ft.
Bloom
Orange
Plant type
Vine
$21.00Currently unavailable
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№ 038
Spiraea virginiana
Virginia Spirea
Spiraea virginianaVirginia Spirea

Important: This plant is sold within South Carolina only.In the high-gradient streams of the southern Appalachians, the Gauley, the Bluestone, the Greenbrier, scattered tributaries of the New River, and a handful of similar second- and third-order rivers, grows a shrub that holds on to rocky bars and scoured banks where almost nothing else can. This is Spiraea virginiana, the Appalachian spiraea, a plant that evolved alongside the violent flood regime of these mountain rivers and depends on that disturbance. The floods scour competing vegetation off the banks, expose mineral soil for germination, and break off rhizome fragments that float downstream to colonize new sites. Where the rivers were dammed, the floods stopped, and the spiraea began to disappear.

Hardiness
Zones 5–8
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
3–8 ft.
Spread
4–8 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Shrub
$38.00In stock
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№ 039
Sunquat, cold-hardy citrus, orange-yellow egg-sized fruit on the tree.
Marmaladequat
Sunquat TreeMarmaladequat

The Sunquat began as an accident in a Beeville, Texas dooryard in the early 1940s, when a man named Leslie Cude noticed a seedling carrying fruit that looked like a small lemon and behaved like a kumquat. Walter Swingle, the great citrus authority of the day, took one look and guessed a cross of Meyer lemon and kumquat, which is where the name Lemonquat comes from and how it entered the collections as Citrus limon × Fortunella. The trouble is that the curators who have kept the tree at Riverside ever since have come to doubt him. The fruit, they think, points to a mandarin somewhere in the parentage rather than a lemon, which would make the plant a mandarinquat wearing the wrong label. Nobody has settled the question. The plant has gone out as Sunquat, Lemonquat, Lemondrop, and Marmaladequat, four names for one tree, each a different theory and not one of them proven. Asking a citrus to hold still long enough to be classified rather misunderstands the family.

Hardiness
Zones 8–10
Light
Full Sun
Height
6–10 ft.
Spread
4–5 ft.
Bloom
White
Plant type
Tree
$42.00In stock
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№ 040
Weigela florida 'Java Red', rose-pink funnel flowers against purple-tinged foliage on a deciduous shrub
Old Fashioned Weigela
Weigela florida 'Java Red'Old Fashioned Weigela

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'.

Hardiness
Zones 5–8
Light
Full Sun / Part Shade
Height
3–4 ft.
Spread
4–5 ft.
Bloom
Pink
Plant type
Shrub
$26.00In stock
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