Thread: Nandina
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Old 02-02-2003, 01:36 AM
Tom Jaszewski
 
Posts: n/a
Default Nandina

Nandina domestica have a hell of a time in that exposure in the
desert. Unfortunately many choices are not made on an evaluation of
the same microclimate observed


On Sat, 01 Feb 2003 14:28:54 GMT, animaux wrote:

I live in Austin, two hundred miles south of Dallas. It is in the high 90s to
low 100s for months at a time and my N. domestica are in full sun, south
exposure, against a cement foundation. These are very well adapted plants to
heat and drought. I've never seen one of them wilt. I'm not sure what you are
talking about.


On Fri, 31 Jan 2003 22:41:13 -0800, "gregpresley" wrote:

Nandina in Tallahassee did poorly in full sun conditions. When self -sown it
NEVER appeared in a sunny area - usually in dappled to full shade areas.
Nandina can be and is grown as a sun plant in temperate climates with cooler
summers, but I would be cautious about moving into full sun in Dallas. Don't
you have any other spot it can go into? Either that, or build it some
protection - a little lathe house or something. It might survive, but
probably with scorched leaves, poor growth, etc.
"Dan" wrote in message
...
Can I move an established nandina? They are a few years old and in full
shade . Anything I should do/not do when moving from almost full shade
to spot with ~5~6 hours afternoon sun?

Thx
Dan
Zone 8 , Dallas TX






Regards,

tomj