Evergreen shrub, flowers vary from blue to white, Mar-May. Native from Oregon to Baja in the coast ranges and Sierra Nevada mountains. Likes full sun and fast drainage. Use as open screen (8') or as a small tree. It can have heavy scent when in flower. This plant is very, very drought tolerant. It was planted in a job in Taft (Shadscale Scrub), watered once, and left in full sun, for 3 summer months and 3 of 10 survived (Saltbush (Atriplex) died on the site). This ceanothus is also deer proof, cold tolerant to at least 0 degrees F. It is usually growing with oaks, pines and Adenostoma. I've seen in all soils. It is a secondary pioneer plant after fires. The best germination I've seen after a fire was on a site down the road from us in heavy clay that was turned into fired brick after the Las Pilitas Fire (the 1985 one). The stumps were not even left as bumps, the rocks on the surface were cracked, and there was no ash. The seedlings were every 1/2" covering a 20-30' area. Tough plants! Native on the nursery site. A good understory plant to grow in the shade of Ceanothus cuneatus, with mulch of Ceanothus leaves and twigs, is Viola pedunculata. Click here for more about Mountain Lilacs.
Ceanothus cuneatus Buckbrush tolerates sand and clay.
Ceanothus cuneatus Buckbrush's foliage color is silver and type is evergreen.
Ceanothus cuneatus Buckbrush's flower color is blue and has a fragrance.
Communities for Ceanothus cuneatus Buckbrush:Chaparral, Central Oak Woodland, Pinyon-Juniper Woodland and Yellow Pine Forest.
| ph: | 6.00 to 8.00 |
|---|---|
| usda: | 7 to 10 |
| height[m]: | 1.00 to 2.00 |
| width[m]: | 1.00 to 2.00 |
| rainfall[cm]: | 30.00 to 82.00 |
| Gallon | Price |
|---|---|
| Out of Stock | $ 7.99 |
Always out of stock ?If the numbers are zero, there is a reason.