General Plant Information (Edit)
Plant Habit: |
Shrub
|
Sun Requirements: |
Full Sun
Full Sun to Partial Shade
|
Water Preferences: |
Mesic
|
Soil pH Preferences: |
Neutral (6.6 – 7.3)
Slightly alkaline (7.4 – 7.8)
Moderately alkaline (7.9 – 8.4)
|
Minimum cold hardiness: |
Zone 2 -45.6 °C (-50 °F) to -42.8 °C (-45°F)
|
Plant Height: |
10-12 feet |
Plant Spread: |
4-8 feet |
Leaves: |
Deciduous
|
Flowers: |
Showy
Fragrant
Blooms on old wood
|
Flower Color: |
Pink
|
Bloom Size: |
Under 1"
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Flower Time: |
Spring
|
Uses: |
Windbreak or Hedge
Guardian plant
Cut Flower
|
Wildlife Attractant: |
Bees
Birds
Butterflies
|
Containers: |
Not suitable for containers
|
Parentage: |
Royalty x unknown |
Child plants: |
one child plant |
Posted by
Skiekitty (Denver Metro - Zone 5a) on Jun 5, 2015 11:16 PM concerning plant:
This is a very late blooming lilac. All the French lilacs had already finished blooming when this cultivar finally started to bloom. The blooms are very long lasting on the plant, not sure about cut. Very spicy smelling, almost clove-like. Tiger Swallowtail butterflies seem to enjoy it.
Posted by
Skiekitty (Denver Metro - Zone 5a) on Apr 14, 2014 12:35 PM concerning plant:
A "Chinese" lilac. The leaves are very different from a French lilac. Not as woody a plant, either. Flowers are much smaller and not as fragrant. Leaves here are elongated and lighter in color, definitely not leathery or heartshaped. Seems to survive zone 5 winters with minimal protection, though.
Posted by
ILPARW (southeast Pennsylvania - Zone 6b) on Jun 16, 2019 7:41 PM concerning plant:
In the 1920's and later a certain Isabelle Preston did a whole lot of hybridizing of lilacs in Ottawa, Canada. The Preston hybrids are usually the cross of the Late Lilac (S. villosa) x the Nodding Lilac (S. reflexa), both Chinese species with the hybrid looking more like the Late Lilac species. The cross is Syringa x prestoniae. However, she also did some crosses with the Hungarian Lilac from central & southern Europe (S. josikaea) x the Nodding Lilac (S. reflexa) to produce S. x josiflexa that is also called a Preston Hybrid. One source says this later cross brought about this James MacFarlane cultivar while other sources say it was the first and more common cross with the Late Lilac. I only occasionally see one of these later blooming lilacs, that bloom 2 to 3 weeks later than the Common Lilac, in average yards in the Midwest or Eastern US; and usually it is James MacFarlane as being the most common cultivar. I sold a few James MacFarlane Lilacs back in the Chicago ,IL, area in the 1980's at two different nurseries. These crosses and the straight species of these lilacs do not have really good fragrance in their flowers like the Common Lilac.
Thread Title |
Last Reply |
Replies |
Syringa Photo by KatieEshraghi |
Jul 17, 2018 4:03 PM |
0 |
Hybrids by Vals_Garden |
Aug 21, 2021 3:57 PM |
0 |
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