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SOUTHLAND WINTER A BERRY GOOD TIME OF YEAR.


Byline: Joshua Siskin

The approach of winter stimulates an interest in botanical appendages that would merit little attention in warmer seasons. At this time of year, just because most plants have ceased flowering does not mean there is nothing to look at in the garden, especially when it comes to the collection of ornamental berries currently on display.

Two of the most compelling December plants are Pyracantha pyracantha (pĭr'əkăn`thə) or firethorn, any hardwood evergreen shrub of the genus Pyracantha of the family Rosaceae (rose family).  and Cotoneaster. Pyracantha is commonly known as firethorn firethorn: see pyracantha.  (pyr, fire; acantha acantha /acan·tha/ (ah-kan´thah)
1. spine (1).

2. a spinous process of a vertebra.


a·can·tha
n. pl.
, thorn) on account of its fiery red or orange fruit and thorny demeanor. The smallish oval leaves of pyracantha are a deep emerald green. Pyracantha is a plant that can be trained up a trellis or against a sunny wall. Tie shoots to baling wire strung horizontally across the wall, then go up 6 inches. String another wire and tie more shoots to this next wire, continuing up the wall at 6-inch intervals. Pyracantha coccinea can be trained up a 20-foot wall in such a manner, creating a stunning cordon tapestry of green leaves and red berries.

ernatively, pyracantha can be shaped into a multitiered topiary topiary

Art of training living trees and shrubs into artificial, decorative shapes. Topiary is known to have been practiced in the 1st century AD. The earliest topiary was probably the simple development of edgings, cones, columns, and spires to accent a garden scene.
 of boxes or globes, albeit at the expense of berry production. Left to grow unchecked, pyracantha is a robust shrub that makes a wonderful living fence. Its thorns are legendary and will compete with barbed wire in securing an area. Left unpruned, its branches shoot up at 45-degree angles to heights of 8 or 10 feet, imparting a sense of drama and excitement that no other shrub can create.

Cotoneaster (kuh-TOE-nee-as-ter) is sometimes referred to as red clusterberry because of its large and long-lasting pendulous pendulous /pen·du·lous/ (-lus) hanging loosely; dependent.

pendulous

hanging loosely; dependent.


pendulous crop
see pendulous crop.
 clusters of berries that cover the plant in fall and winter. It is highly drought tolerant. Cotoneaster species range from 15-foot tall shrubs (Cotoneaster lacteus) with romantic arching branches, to matlike ground covers. Cotoneaster dammeri is an excellent selection for balcony planters since its shoots will spill over and grow straight down a wall. One of the most gratifying grat·i·fy  
tr.v. grat·i·fied, grat·i·fy·ing, grat·i·fies
1. To please or satisfy: His achievement gratified his father. See Synonyms at please.

2.
 winter shrubs is the Rugosa rugosa

wrinkled.
 rose. It boasts 1-inch, spherical red hips (fruits) throughout the colder months.

Much work has been done with the Rugosa rose in recent years. New flower colors have appeared to complement the fragrant reddish-purple blooms long associated with the species. The leaves of the Rugosa rose are special, having a leathery leath·er·y  
adj.
Having the texture or appearance of leather: a leathery face.



leather·i·ness n.
 texture completely out of character with the flimsy foliage for which more common garden roses are known. Nandina domestica, or heavenly bamboo, is yet another shrub resplendent with red berries in December.

Nandina Nandina domestica (Heavenly bamboo or Sacred bamboo), is a suckering shrub in the Barberry family, Berberidaceae; it is a monotypic genus, with this species as its only member. It is native to eastern Asia from the Himalaya east to Japan.  is a plant for all soils and sun exposures, but it will develop powdery pow·der·y  
adj.
1. Composed of or similar to powder.

2. Dusted or covered with or as if with powder.

3. Easily made into powder; friable.

Adj. 1.
 mildew leaf fungus when it is irrigated excessively with sprinklers and when air circulation around its foliage is impeded. Nandina is a plant for all seasons. In spring and summer, it shows white flowers. In fall, its leaves turn color as its red fruit ripens. Throughout the year, its lacy foliage is evocative of a Japanese garden (in fact, the name Nandina is derived from ``nanden,'' which is what it is called in Japan), and its growth habit and appearance are suggestive of bamboo, although it has no botanical kinship with true bamboo. All of the berries/fruits mentioned above are edible, if rather bland. The recommended mode of consumption is to make them into jellies or jams.

If you want some white berries to provide contrast with the red, consider planting a snowberry snowberry, name for several shrubby plants bearing white berries, especially species of the genus Symphoricarpos which is classified in the division Magnoliophyta, class Magnoliopsida, order Dipsacales, family Caprifoliaceae (honeysuckle family).  (Symphoricarpos). Several snowberry species, among them California natives, will grow in our area. Most prefer to be planted in a somewhat shady location.

Peter Ilyanovich, reacting to a recent column on colorful autumn trees, sent the following e-mail: ``I live in the West Valley and have noticed some burgundy-leafed trees on Canoga Avenue just north of Victory Boulevard. I have also noticed along the Ventura Freeway from Woodland Hills to Encino one particular tree with leaves in various shades of gold and scarlet, some of which have red berries. Could you identify these trees?''

The burgundy-leafed trees are Japanese sand pears (Pyrus pyrifolia) and the freeway trees are Chinese pistachios. There are male and female Chinese pistachios; only the females bear fruit.

TIP OF THE WEEK: Harry Bard, a correspondent from Rosamond, grows cactus as a hobby and also sells what he grows to the public. He cautions that many cactuses and euphorbias (thorny succulents from South Africa) freeze in the Antelope Valley winter. Bard even grows saguaro saguaro: see cactus.
saguaro

Large, candelabra-shaped, branched cactus (Cereus giganteus, or Carnegiea gigantea) native to Mexico, Arizona, and California. Slow-growing at first, mature saguaros may eventually reach 50 ft (15 m) in height.
 cactuses - those huge-limbed signature cactuses from Arizona - but keeps them protected in a greenhouse. To learn more about cactuses that will and will not grow in the high desert, call him at (661) 256-6771.
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Title Annotation:L.A. Life
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Dec 9, 2000
Words:767
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