Choosing Shrubs for Winter
Fall can bring brilliant and fiery displays as leaves turn different reds and yellows. Eventually, the colors fade and winter gray blankets all. If you choose your backyard shrubs carefully, however, they can add color and interest to the garden. Which plants make good winter shrubs? It is important to pick cold hardy shrubs that thrive in your hardiness zone. In addition, look for shrubs that offer ornamental qualities when their leaves are gone.
Fruiting Shrubs to Grow in Winter
When winter arrives, you’ll be glad to have shrubs with winter interest in your backyard. Trees that hold onto fruit into the winter months are often very ornamental. Winterberry hollies (Ilex verticillata) are popular choices for shrubs to grow in winter. These native shrubs lose their leaves in winter, but the red holly berries stay on the branches almost until spring. Wild birds feed on the fruit. There are many other shrubs that hold onto fruit throughout winter. These cold hardy shrubs include:
American cranberry bush viburnum (Viburnum trilobum)
Staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina)
Beautyberry (Callicarpa americana)
Possumhaw viburnum (Viburnum nudum)
Winter Shrubs with Beautiful Bark
If a deciduous shrub has beautiful or unusual bark, it can become a focal point in winter. The Redosier dogwood shrub (Cornus sericea), a type of red-twig dogwood, displays brilliant red stems once autumn leaves fall. This makes it a great winter shrub to have. Coral bark willows (Salix alba ‘Britzensis’) also stand out as a winter shrub. Their pale orange bark adds color to the garden. Shrubs with exfoliating bark are especially lovely shrubs for winter. Consider planting a paperbark maple (Acer griseum). When its leaves fall, you can admire the cinnamon-hued peeling bark that is the texture of paper. Another you could select is the Japanese stewartia (Stewartia pseudocamellia). Its bark peels back to expose hues of brown, silver, and gold.