PICS OF DAY:

PICS OF DAY:
Models Take Over Times Square

°

Homepage / Homes
Text Size

Boxwood More Than Shrub For Sculpting

Plant Can Be Sheared In Normal Fashion, Help Structure Garden

POSTED: Wednesday, October 8, 2003
UPDATED: 4:59 pm EST December 13, 2004

Subscribe to Garden Design Magazine
Boxing LessonsPutting structure and boxwood in the same sentence makes most gardeners picture tight little rows that transform a landscape into a geometric puzzle filled with French-poodle balls or likenesses of Winston Churchill. But it doesn’t have to be that way. This shrub can be sheared in a formal fashion or left in an untrimmed and natural state.

Boxwood is an essential tool in helping give gardens a sense of organization. A bunch of plants, after all, does not a garden make. Structure, which guides a visitor’s eyes and feet through a space, is the underpinning of the gardener’s vision. This organizing principle can be achieved with hardscaping, such as paths and walls, but can also incorporate the landscaping materials themselves.

The use of boxwood can be traced back 4,000 years to the Egyptians; they, and, later, the Greeks and Romans, valued its strong, elastic wood for making tools and objects like musical instruments, ornamental boxes, and combs. Native in much of southern and eastern Europe, it eventually became a critical component of the French parterre. The Romans reintroduced box to Britain, where it had grown before the Ice Age, and colonists in the New World sent home for it from the mid-1600s on, as their gardens became more grand. Box isn’t native to the United States, but it has been with us for so long, and has been so integral to our gardens, that it’s hard not to think of it as family.

An ideal evergreen hedge or topiary plant, box takes well to trimming and has a thick covering of leaves that gives the impression of a continuous surface. You plant this shrub as much for your grandchildren as for yourself; it can live to be 300 years old.

Most of us think of box in the way that Gertrude Stein thought of roses. Since we look at it as defining the structure of the garden, or as material for sculpting, we rarely notice its details. Yet there are characteristics that should be taken into account when choosing plants. Of the five species, and more than 100 commercially available cultivars, three species are used most often. Make sure you buy the ones that best fill your needs. (Though boxwood does bloom in the spring, the flowers are small and of little visual interest.)

Buxus sempervirens, also called common box, is a species that has dense, fine-textured foliage. It grows as both a shrub and a tree, and is hardy to Zone 6. Its best-known cultivars are "Suffruticosa," or English box, and "Arborescens," American box. English box is a rounded, mounding shrub with tufts of cloudlike, fine-textured foliage. This is the standard for close-cropped edging because it can grow less than 1 inch per year over a three-century life span. Traditionally, English box was used to enclose the sections of kitchen gardens and parterres. American box, useful for topiaries and tall hedges, has larger, coarser leaves, and grows within 100 years to a height of 20 feet and a width of 15 feet.

The B. sempervirens cultivar "Graham Blandy" grows like a telephone pole: just 1 foot in diameter, it attains heights of 15 to 18 feet, with full green foliage. If it reminds you of an exclamation point, use it as one. "Elegantissima," a spectacular specimen plant with creamy variegated foliage, has a broad, conical growth habit, reaching a height of 6 to 7 feet and a width of 3 to 4 feet. "Vardar Valley," which tops out at about 6 feet, is a broad, open, spreading plant that retains its dark-green color all winter; its new foliage has a lovely blue cast, which weathers away by late summer. This cultivar and the 3-foot-tall dwarf form are typically used for hedges.

Buxus microphylla, littleleaf box, is hardier than B. sempervirens, growing as far north as zone 5. If you’re in a mood for some garden pom-poms, a cultivar of B. microphyllavar. japonica, "Morris Midget", is the plant for you. With medium-green foliage and a round growth habit, it reaches 12 to 18 inches with a 2- to 3-foot spread.

Korean boxwood, Buxus sinica var. insularis, will survive in zone 4 if protected (with windbreaks or by siting) from harsh winter winds and sun. Protected or not, the foliage may bronze in cold weather. The conical "Justin Brouwers" reaches 3 feet.

Of course, you can’t have been around as long as boxwoods have without making a few enemies. Thankfully, you won’t have to worry about deer, which usually ignore it. English box is prey to mites and fungus-induced cankers, and most cultivars are susceptible to the insects boxwood psyllid and boxwood leaf miner. (Call your county Cooperative Extension Service for ways to manage them.)

A little vigilance is a small price to pay for the beauty and functionality box offers. What other shrub lets you hang an entire garden on its back?
This article appeared in Garden Design, A World Publications magazine. You can subscribe online.

Sponsored Links

Links We Like

Sponsored Content
In the workplace it’s the little things that get you noticed and help you stand out above the rest. Do these things and increase your chances for a promotion. More

If your credit is shabby, you'll need to shore up your score to convince a lender you're worthy. Here's how to boost your point total. More

Everyone is trying to save a little cash these days, and one way to do it is by having an easy to insure car. Check out 20 cars that can save you money. More

Though stress does not cause irritable bowel syndrome, it can trigger or intensify your symptoms. Learn more to help manage your IBS. More

Most Popular

Marketplace

  • AutoClick to Expand

  • JobsClick to Expand

    • 7 Killer Cover Letter Mistakes

      Don’t ruin your chances of landing that new job by making easy to correct mistakes on your cover letter.

    • Why Having Fun At Work Matters

      If people are having fun, they’re going to work harder, stay longer, maintain their composure in a crisis and take better care of the organization.

    • Ten Tips To Boost Your Interview IQ

      Interviewing is a learned skill, and there are no second chances to make a great first impression. So study these 10 strategies to enhance your interview IQ.

    • Learn How To Deal With Pay Cuts

      If you’re about to take a pay cut, find out how you can go about dealing with it and stay proactive about your salary.

  • WomenClick to Expand

    • Healthy Living In Your 40s

      Your guide to looking and feeling your best.

    • Manage Stress, Find Balance

      The idea of living a balanced life may seem like an oxymoron. Yet working toward balance and self-care is key to feeling in control and more joyful at home and work.

    • Weight & Exercise: The Right Mix

      Being healthy is related to how well you take care of yourself. But it’s never too late! A woman can learn new, healthy habits at any age.

  • InsuranceClick to Expand

    • Auto Insurance Quotes

      Simply enter your zip code and get great deals on your car insurance from the top companies. Click here and start saving today!

    • Health Insurance Quotes

      No matter where you live, you shouldn’t have to pay too much for health insurance. Your zip code is all you need and we’ll do the rest to find you great insurance rates.

    • Home Insurance Quotes

      Your home is your most valuable asset. So make sure you have coverage that fits your needs and doesn’t break the bank.

    • Life Insurance Quotes

      What would happen to your family if you were suddenly gone? Don’t leave their future to chance and find top quality life insurance before it’s too late.

    • Business Insurance Quotes

      Don’t take chances when it comes to insuring your business. To get the best rates from top companies in your area just enter your zip code.

  • HomesClick to Expand