We had a fairly leggy loropetalum worked up for our
club show plant sale. It was done as a multiple trunk
kengai in a Chinese pot. Very lovely.
I think we may crave species that are not quite hardy
because we can't imagine the plant in the back yard to
be exotic enough to be called bonsai.
Kitsune Miko
--- Nina Shishkoff wrote:
Without seeing the boxwood we all can't be
certain, but it doesn't sound like a
Kingsville boxwood to me. Sounds like one of the
hardier species--Korean or English
perhaps. I have never heard of a Kingsville
flowering, and the leaves sound too big.
This multitude of answers is making me nervous,
because I bought an unmarked boxwood at a freaky
little nursery, and I think it is a kingsville (pale
yellow-green, small-leaved, fine textured). I'd
like to overwinter it successfully. Factoring in
everybody's advice, it sounds like I should put it
in the barn, but if Dale wants to weigh in, I'll
listen to his advice with my usual rapt respect
(wink, wink).
Nina. Maryland. Zone 6/7
PS- The freaky nursery was also selling Loropetallum
(labeled as Fothergilla, but hey, close enough). I
love Loropetallum, I think they are the prettiest
shrubs in the whole entire world (I have seen one
mediocre Loropetallum bonsai; anyone ever seen a
good one?), but they are not reliably hardy here.
So the question is: indoors? Outdoors with
protection? Barn?
Why do we always desire the species that are
borderline hardy?
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