Native Azalea Or Wild Honeysuckle?
When you understand which strain of honeysuckle is invasive, you will know the best plant to befriend.
Some folks call those Southern bushes with with light pink blossoms and long, protruding stamens "wild honeysuckle" because the blooms resemble those of Japanese honeysuckle. But it isn't honeysuckle, and that's a very good thing.
Is Honeysuckle Invasive?
Japanese honeysuckle (Lonicera japonica) is an invasive vine that spreads by seed and traveling roots, choking pristine woodlands with impenetrable tangles of twining stems. It's among the most evil weeds ever introduced the into U.S.
No such fate awaits those who plant the well-mannered Piedmont azalea (Rhododendron canescens) shown above. Native to woodlands from North Carolina to north Florida and over to Arkansas and east Texas, it forms an upright, multi-stemmed, airy shrub that can grow 10 feet tall and wide over time. As with all species of native azalea, it's deciduous, unlike the ubiquitous evergreen azaleas that hail from Japan and Korea. Flowers range in color from pink to rose or white and exude a spicy, sweet scent. It's adapted to USDA Zones 5 to 9.
The Friendly Native Azalea
Piedmont azalea thrives in my Alabama garden where it enjoys dappled sun/shade and moist, well-drained, acid soil containing lots of organic matter from decaying tree leaves. A naturalistic setting suits it best, so I combined it with fellow native woodland plants, including ferns, wild ginger, Virginia bluebells, dogwood, serviceberry, strawberry bush, red buckeye, and huckleberry.
A similar looking "wild honeysuckle," pinxterbloom azalea (Rhododendron periclymenoides), has a more northerly native range stretching from Massachusetts to Tennessee and north Georgia. My father planted one in our backyard when I was growing up in Maryland and it was always a treat when it flowered. Ours bloomed pink, but white and lavender forms occur. It's smaller than Piedmont azalea, slowly growing to maybe five feet tall, and its blossoms offer a delicate sweet scent. You can grow it in USDA Zones 4 to 8.
Other Wild Honeysuckles
There are other fragrant "wild honeysuckles" that include Alabama azalea (Rhododendron alabamense), swamp azalea (Rhododendron viscosum), and sweet azalea (Rhododendron arborescens), Sweet azalea is deciduous and loosely branched, a shrub that is a delightful addition to your garden.
Sweet azalea yields fragrant white flowers with prominent red pistils in late spring to early summer. It ranges in size from 4-10’ tall and develops attractive glossy green foliage in summer. In autumn the foliage of sweet azalea develops stunning shades of yellow, bronze, orange and red. Sweet azalea requires acidic, well-drained soil and is tolerant of a range of soil conditions from moist to dry.
How To Source Native Azalea
Where can you get a native azalea? I don't recommend digging one up from the wild. You'll probably end up killing it and, besides, it isn't yours. Independent garden centers that carry a wide variety of native plants are your best bet. Plant sales at botanical gardens are another useful source. That's where mine came from. You can also find them for sale online at places like Nearly Native Nursery in Fayetteville, Georgia. They ship plants from October 1 to April 30, so the time to act is now.
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