Tag Archives: Circaea lutetiana

Arboretum: Southern Magnolia, Wildflowers, and Parasitic Plants

Can Southern magnolia trees survive in Boston? I thought not. Even the Arboretum’s own Bulletin of Popular Information, didn’t think so, saying in May of 1911 that Magnolia grandiflora is “not hardy at the north.” That changed in 1983, when a tree was planted behind the Visitor Center. More accessible, however, is a tree just off Meadow Road behind a red maple. Planted in 1998, this cultivar — Bracken’s Brown Beauty — is doing very well.

Southern magnolia flower
Southern magnolia flower (accession 278-98-A)

Continue reading

Posted in Nature | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Arboretum: Southern Magnolia, Wildflowers, and Parasitic Plants