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Dec 4, 2021 8:44 AM CST
Thread OP
Name: Frank Richards
Clinton, Michigan (Zone 5b)

Hydrangeas Peonies Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Plant Identifier Garden Ideas: Master Level
Taxus x media 'L.C. Bobbink' 11/2021 Yew- (cuspidata x baccata) Anglojap Yew, Size at 10 years: 6x6', Non -flowering, dark green foliage, USDA Hardiness Zone 4-7, Michigan Bloom Month -, In Garden Bed T1 for 9.0 YEARS (Lowes,). Planted in 2012.

Chicago Botanic Garden: This cultivar matures into a rounded shape of 7' by 7'. Female plants produce red, fleshy, single-seeded fruit instead of cones (these are poisonous). This is a cross between Japanese yews (T. cuspidata); and English yews (T. baccata). It prefers average, medium moist, well-drained soil in full sun to part shade, but can tolerate a wide range of soils as long as drainage is good. It can also tolerate full shade and considerable pruning.

Big Box item. Not much info. It is rounded like most of the other yews that I have. Looks like the x media cross is called anglojap. Planted in 2012. Darker shade in winter.

Photo by F.D.Richards, SE Michigan. Additional photos of this plant from 2013, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21:

https://www.flickr.com/search/...

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Dec 5, 2021 9:58 AM CST
Name: John
Scott County, KY (Zone 5b)
You can't have too many viburnums..
Region: United States of America Region: Kentucky Farmer Cat Lover Birds Bee Lover
Butterflies Enjoys or suffers hot summers Enjoys or suffers cold winters Dog Lover Hummingbirder Lover of wildlife (Raccoon badge)
I am going to add a bit of commentary and plant part descriptions to "flesh out" Frank's fine information about his landscape plants.

Yews (Taxus sp.) are conifers in the family Taxaceae, and thus DO have flowering parts - just like other conifers like Pine, Spruce, and Fir. They are just quite different from the large showy blooms that one observes on many other woody landscape plants like Dogwood, Magnolia, Crape-myrtle, Oleander, etc.

Simply put in botanical speak (from American Conifer Society website):

"The seed cones are highly modified with each cone containing a single seed measuring 0.16 to 0.28 inch (4 – 7 mm) long, partly surrounded by a modified scale which develops into a soft, bright red berry-like structure called an aril. Arils are 0.32 to 0.6 inch (8 – 15 mm) long and wide and open at the end. They mature 6 to 9 months after pollination, and with the seed contained, are eaten by thrushes, waxwings and other birds, which disperse the hard seeds undamaged in their droppings. Maturation of the arils is spread over 2 to 3 months, increasing the chances of successful seed dispersal.

The pollen cones are globose, measuring 0.12 to 0.24 inch (3 – 6 mm) in diameter, and shed their pollen in early spring. Yews are mostly dioecious, but occasional individuals can be variably monoecious, or change sex with time.


https://conifersociety.org/con...

Anyone that has male Yew plants in their landscapes know full well that they bloom, because the slightest touch when their globose flowers are open will release a cloud of beigey yellow pollen - which is amazing to behold. There are likely YouTube or other videos online illustrating this characteristic.

I will add that the cones of Yews look like a fleshy fruit, but that is just a different expression of a reproductive structure. The hard seeds have the toxic chemical in them, but the fleshy red arils apparently do not - but I still would not suggest testing that out personally. The leaves (needles) are also highly toxic, certainly to many/most livestock and pets and I suspect to humans as well. Deer apparently are unfazed by these chemicals, and browse Yews to the point of the plants' death in such august landscapes as the Morton Arboretum.

Gardeners should read closely many sources of information about these handsome and highly useful landscape plants, and fully understand all their value and the few pitfalls.

I was probably unsuspectedly imbued with my interest in plants by the good Lord as a young student at the Catholic grade school, where the front walks were lined with a Yew hedge of female plants. My cohorts and I took great glee in flinging ripe fruit at the young ladies and their pristine white uniforms. I suspect there are parents to this day wrestling with removing these red stains, and posters of VV haunt church halls and old post office walls ("Have You Seen This Villian???")

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Dec 5, 2021 12:44 PM CST
Name: Porkpal
Richmond, TX (Zone 9a)
Cat Lover Charter ATP Member Keeper of Poultry I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Dog Lover Keeps Horses
Roses Plant Identifier Farmer Raises cows Celebrating Gardening: 2015 Garden Ideas: Level 2
Yup, getting an early start on a life of crime, no doubt.
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Dec 5, 2021 2:14 PM CST
Name: John
Scott County, KY (Zone 5b)
You can't have too many viburnums..
Region: United States of America Region: Kentucky Farmer Cat Lover Birds Bee Lover
Butterflies Enjoys or suffers hot summers Enjoys or suffers cold winters Dog Lover Hummingbirder Lover of wildlife (Raccoon badge)
Costume design and wardrobe by Natalie Durest...
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Dec 5, 2021 5:57 PM CST
Name: Amanda
KC metro area, Missouri (Zone 6a)
Bookworm Cat Lover Dog Lover Region: Missouri Native Plants and Wildflowers Roses
Region: United States of America Zinnias Million Pollinator Garden Challenge
Cute dog. You on the other hand have trouble written on you in big bold letters. Hilarious! Hilarious!
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Dec 5, 2021 6:15 PM CST
Name: Tiffany purpleinopp
Opp, AL @--`--,----- 🌹 (Zone 8b)
Region: United States of America Houseplants Overwinters Tender Plants Indoors Garden Sages Plant Identifier Garden Ideas: Level 2
Organic Gardener Composter Miniature Gardening Million Pollinator Garden Challenge Tender Perennials Butterflies
LOL!!
The golden rule: Do to others only that which you would have done to you.
👀😁😂 - SMILE! -☺😎☻☮👌✌∞☯
The only way to succeed is to try!
🐣🐦🐔🍯🐾🌺🌻🌸🌼🌹
The best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago. The 2nd best time is now. (-Unknown)
👒🎄👣🏡🍃🍂🌾🌿🍁❦❧🍁🍂🌽❀☀ ☕👓🐝
Try to be more valuable than a bad example.
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Dec 6, 2021 5:53 PM CST
Name: John
Scott County, KY (Zone 5b)
You can't have too many viburnums..
Region: United States of America Region: Kentucky Farmer Cat Lover Birds Bee Lover
Butterflies Enjoys or suffers hot summers Enjoys or suffers cold winters Dog Lover Hummingbirder Lover of wildlife (Raccoon badge)
Yeah, well, keep asking me to get involved, and you'll see me grow up before your very eyes.

I like looking back at these photos, and identifying the plants in them that influenced my youth - just like the stories related heretofore.

Somewhere, there's the picture of the house in Perkiomenville where we lived outside Philly, before moving to Kentucky. Don't kid yourself:

There's a Viburnum smack dab in the background (stage left)!

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Dec 20, 2021 2:26 PM CST
Name: Tiffany purpleinopp
Opp, AL @--`--,----- 🌹 (Zone 8b)
Region: United States of America Houseplants Overwinters Tender Plants Indoors Garden Sages Plant Identifier Garden Ideas: Level 2
Organic Gardener Composter Miniature Gardening Million Pollinator Garden Challenge Tender Perennials Butterflies
My biggest Gardenia grew so much this year. This is what it looks like when I stand next to it & look up at it.
Thumb of 2021-12-20/purpleinopp/81043c
The golden rule: Do to others only that which you would have done to you.
👀😁😂 - SMILE! -☺😎☻☮👌✌∞☯
The only way to succeed is to try!
🐣🐦🐔🍯🐾🌺🌻🌸🌼🌹
The best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago. The 2nd best time is now. (-Unknown)
👒🎄👣🏡🍃🍂🌾🌿🍁❦❧🍁🍂🌽❀☀ ☕👓🐝
Try to be more valuable than a bad example.

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