I am new to gardening, having lived in a townhome most of my life. I
recently bought a house with an acre of land, and have been making
plans for landscaping it.
My wife and I were in Kentucky recently, and saw what we were told was
a tulip tree. I looked up tulip trees in my book on plants, and what
we saw was not what is described as a tulip tree in my book. That was
a very tall tree that has yellow flowers.
The plant we saw was more like a large shrub, and had flowers that
from the distance I was from them really looked like tulips. Can
anyone tell me what this is? The one I saw had deep purple flowers.
I live in Kansas City, and wondered if it would grow here. My wife
really liked them.
Mac
Mac
On Sun, 30 Mar 2003 23:10:43 -0800, "gregpresley" <gpre...@iea.com>
wrote:
They have been blooming for a couple of weeks now. I'm in Raleigh, NC, zone
7b. They are very pretty. The one you saw could have been a different
variety (color). I'm not really sure if they actually do have different
colors. The ones in this area have all been a pink color.
If you don't know your zone, you can go to Google or Yahoo and do a search
on USDA Hardiness Maps. A site there will identify your zone.
Hope this helps.
Penny
Zone 7b - North Carolina
"William McHarg" <wmc...@kc.rr.com> wrote in message
news:g1df8vchts1jiji8e...@4ax.com...
> The tree you are talking about is a magnolia - magnolia soulangeana to be
> exact. It sometimes goes by the name of tulip tree, japanese magnolia, or
> saucer magnolia.
<snipped>
> Magnolia soulangeana should be perfectly hardy in Kansas City. Ask in a local
> nursery - some varieties perform better than others in different
> geographical locations. They also come in different color combinations, from
> nearly white through deep purple - or pink and white, purple and white, rose
> and white, etc.
My mom is about 15 miles from downtown KC and was just telling me
yesterday about the local magnolias. She referred to them as "Japanese
magnolias" and said she's watched their beautiful blossoms barely open
and then turn black overnight every year for 25 years. The trees are
hearty but bloom too early to escape later frosts in that area. It
would break my heart to watch that every year.
sam
pnw z/8
Marilyn in Ohio