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Old 15-05-2005, 03:49 PM
Mike Prager
 
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Newt wrote:

What are the sun conditions where it's planted? It doesn't like very
sandy soil. I'm thinking since you live on the coast, maybe it is
getting burned by the winter sun.
http://tinyurl.com/8qrvc

Do you want fragrance and what height and width will the space
accomadate?


Newt,

The soil is sandy, but good enough so that most everything
else does fine. That includes camellias, azaleas, crape
myrtles, privet, abelia, loropetalum, six viburnum species,
and indeed O. fortunei.

I can't rule out winter sun as the problem, but my thought
it's that we often have warm winters that very suddenly turn
quite cold and damage the plant before it has gone dormant.
The same thing happens in spring: it weather can get warm and
then suddenly go well below freezing. The almost constant wind
in the site does not help.

We would like fragrance (and freedom from spraying). The site
will accommodate a shrub about 8 ft wide by 12 or more ft
tall. It is not far from a large doublefile viburnum
'Shasta'. That has a strong horizontal form, and I was
looking for something vertical in the spot now filled by the
Osmanthus.

We have winter honeysuckle on the other side of the driveway,
but I don't want one in this spot.

Thanks for any suggestions.


Mike Prager
On the North Carolina coast - Zone 8a
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