Syringa reticulata is native to Japan and is commonly called Japanese tree lilac. Although a lilac, this member of the species is quite different in appearance than those with which gardeners are more ...
I have a Japanese lilac “tree.” How can I get it to have more blooms on it? This year there were hardly any. The trunk of the tree is about three inches around and about 4½-feet tall with the round ...
A garden staple in cold-winter regions, lilacs are best known for their flamboyant and typically fragrant flower clusters. And just when you thought we were done with the lilacs for another season, ...
A small tree with pretty white flowers borne in profusion is the Japanese Tree Lilac, Syringa reticulata. It's hardy in zones 3 to 7, and at maturity it will be 20-30 feet tall and 15-25 feet wide. It ...
For such a long time I have known and loved the ivory silk lilac tree. One was planted outside the secretary’s office at the Crawford County Fairgrounds, right after the new office opened sometime ...
Q: One of my new Japanese tree lilacs -- just planted late this spring -- is struggling. It looks like the leaves are browning and curling, especially around the edges. Some branches are pretty much ...
At garden centers, on garden tours, over dinner and in emails, people are asking about a tree with fragrant white flowers. It's a Japanese lilac tree (Syringa reticulata), a gorgeous beauty that ...
When a newly planted Japanese lilac tree blooms next spring and gives off a flowery fragrance, the Central Lakes College community will remember those who died from COVID-19. A joint project between ...
Daughters from the first crops of sires Orfevre and Lord Kanaloa are among the favorites for the May 20 Yushun Himba (Japanese Oaks, G1) at Tokyo Racecourse. Almond Eye, by 2013 Japanese Horse of the ...
(Here are photos from all four sides. Click on the arrows to see them all.) More info from Linda: East side of house, on a mound. I believe it is a Japanese Lilac Standard from Suburban 14 years ago ...
More than half a century ago Kenneth Birst took a Norway maple seedling from his in-laws' property in Fargo, put it in a dirt-filled Folgers coffee can, brought it to Bismarck and planted it in his ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results
Feedback