An evergreen shrub to 8 feet with medium to small dark green leaves garden tolerant, good hedge or screen, and fast, to 8 feet in 2 yrs . This one is so fast that a gopher ate off one side, the plant fell over, and still made 8 ft. in 3 years (it looked a little crooked). First introduced in 1948 by Walter Lammerts, Mountain Haze seems to appear a hybrid, with one of the parents being Ceanothus cyaneus. Probably has some Ceanothus impressus nipomoensis in the gene pool. This hybrid needs more water than 'Frosty Blue' (which looks its twin but for lighter flowers). Not the best candidate for growing in heavy soil if you tend to overwater, or on drip. It will basically grow so fast theres no bottom to the plant, just top leaves and then it looks beat up. A winner in a lean loam with minimal water and occasional pruning. A dream hedge, (Mountain Haze is so fast) it has enormous value as a fast filler to plant with slower longer lived, bushes like Arctostaphylos Dr. Hurd, the scrub oaks, Heteromeles(Toyon), or Rhamnus californica. Click here for more about Mountain Lilacs.
Ceanothus Mountain Haze Mountain Haze tolerates sand.
Ceanothus Mountain Haze Mountain Haze's foliage color is silver and type is evergreen.
Ceanothus Mountain Haze Mountain Haze's flower color is blue.
| ph: | 5.00 to 7.00 |
|---|---|
| usda: | 8 to 10 |
| height[m]: | 2.00 to 3.00 |
| width[m]: | 2.00 to 3.00 |
| rainfall[cm]: | 31.00 to 64.00 |