27+ Wax Myrtles
It sees uses both in the garden and for candlemaking as well as a medicinal plant.
Wax myrtles. Wax myrtles generally do not require. Wax myrtles are an excellent choice for the florida yard especially coastal areas. The wax covered berries are favorite treats of around 40 bird species. Wax myrtles do best when watered around the drip line every 10 to 14 days. This shrub tree is no maintenance once established. Wax myrtle care involves fertilization and pruning for shape or pruning when limbs are damaged or split off by heavy ice and snow. Excellent screen or specimen.
With dense foliage and a fast. It can grow up to 5 feet in a season and it can be kept low and bushy or pruned up into a tree around 20 feet tall. The wax myrtle tolerates drought heat and salt. Wax myrtles prefer well draining slightly acidic soils but will adapt to just about any soil type. Today the wax myrtle is better appreciated for its easy care and salt tolerance. Wax myrtle is a fast growing shrub or small tree that is extremely hardy and resistant to drought sandy soil beach exposure and salt spray. Wax myrtle produces fruit clusters that contain thousands of berries.
Native range in the united states myrica cerifera is a small evergreen tree or large shrub native to north and central america and the caribbean. Some botanists split the genus into two genera on the basis of the catkin and fruit structure restricting myrica to a few species and treating the others in morella. Historically leaves of the wax myrtle tree were used for fragrance and flammability when making candles. Common names include bayberry bay rum tree candleberry sweet gale and wax myrtle. Description fast growth rate. Landscape uses for wax myrtle hedge large accent lining the edge of a pond along the driveway backdrop for smaller plants privacy screen shade plant by the patio or deck along the property border large anchor for a wildlife garden small tree. Clusters of waxy bluish gray berries persist through winter.
The glossy olive green aromatic foliage is reminiscent of bayberry candles. Also called southern bayberry its name derives from the waxy berries which were once harvested to make bayberry candles. Its common names include southern wax myrtle southern bayberry candleberry bayberry tree and tallow shrub. This fragrance still used today has earned the shrub a common name of southern bayberry. As a rule of thumb if the soil. Has attractive bark and tends to develop multiple stems.