Profusive Photinias
ALL TEXT AND PHOTOS © Marlene A. Condon
I originally wanted to grow the
shrub commonly called “Red-tips” or Photinia because the new growth
can be quite red—my absolute favorite color. I hadn’t really considered
it in terms of wildlife, but not long after planting six bushes along the west
side of my deck, I discovered this plant to be superbly suited to many kinds of
critters!
The plants grew quickly,
shooting up so fast that when my stepmother visited my new home, she said I
must have “quite a green thumb”. She couldn’t believe that such big plants had
been planted such a short time before her visit.
The tall, evergreen shrubs
were an immediate hit with birds as cold winter weather settled in. I soon
discovered that White-throated Sparrows and Dark-eyed Juncos from the northern
states and Canada were sleeping among the glossy leaves that helped to shelter
them from icy winds and snow.
Throughout each day I would
see Tufted Titmice, Golden- and Ruby-crowned Kinglets, and Carolina Chickadees
searching over the leaves for leftover aphids (a “pest” according to gardening
websites, but in reality, nutritious food for many organisms). Numerous species of
songbirds and Gray Squirrels checked out the safety of the deck from those same
branches before visiting for seed and water. And much to my delight,
Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers have continued to visit every winter to suck sap from my big (about 25
feet tall, now) Photinias.
Making neat rows of sap
“wells” on the trunks, these northern birds spend hours where I can easily
watch them and the variety of other creatures that also desire a sugary treat.
Squirrels, insects flying on warmer days, and songbirds (such as cardinals,
kinglets, juncos, titmice, and chickadees) all sneak in for a sip when the
sapsucker is not looking. These activities continue to this day, 36 years later.
The big shrubs also provide
protective cover for birds as they flee predators. More than once I have
watched with surprise as a Sharp-shinned or Cooper’s Hawk (two kinds of raptors
that feed mainly upon songbirds) tried to maneuver through the thickly branched
bushes to catch a bird. The hawks have never been successful, but they have
provided me with the opportunity to see them well, something that is not often
easy to do! I have even seen an Eastern Screech Owl in the Photinia during
years when a pair is nesting in one of my wildlife boxes.
During the warm months of the
year, cardinals have nested in the Photinias, and many hard-to-see avian summer
inhabitants have stopped in for a quick visit. Yellow-billed cuckoos, birds
that are rather secretive in habit and are more often heard than seen, will
sometimes fly into the Photinias where I get to view them for a few moments. I
have gotten a great look at a Louisiana Waterthrush and a Wood Thrush when
these summer neighbors flew into the bushes and looked around a bit.
In late summer and fall as
birds are beginning to migrate farther south, I often catch sight of warblers
in the Photinias. Many of these birds are wonderfully colored and a beautiful
sight to behold, and thus always cause for great excitement.
I had read that the flat
heads of small white blossoms on these spring-blooming plants developed into
bright red berries (yes, yet more red!) that were eaten by wildlife. After
several fruitless years, I had given up, thinking that perhaps the male and
female flowers were on separate plants and that I must have all males. But lo
and behold, eight years after I had planted the Photinias, one of my bushes
finally held beautifully red berries in November, and all the plants began to flower
and fruit every year. Flocks of American Robins and Cedar Waxwings have landed
to eat these little red delights (to their stomachs and to my eyes), and Gray
Squirrels enjoy the fruits too.
Much to my surprise, I have
seen squirrels eating the lustrously waxy Photinia leaves during the winter.
And in springtime, the Photinia flowers are a magnet for many kinds of bees and
other insects, proving that they are loaded with nectar and qualifying the
Photinia as a good wildlife plant in yet another way.
The Chinese Photinia (there
are said to be 40-60 species) that I bought locally is the most common Photinia
grown in the southern part of the United States. It can reach a possible height
of 36 feet, but you rarely see them allowed to grow to their full height and
form. That’s a shame because these trees, though nonnative, truly bring in a
profusion of wildlife for your viewing pleasure.
NATURE ADVICE:
Horticulturalists advise pruning Photinias, but my advice is to just leave them
to their own devices for maximum wildlife benefit. Whether you plant just one
or several, place the plant(s) where they can fulfill their destiny by growing
tall and wide in a sunny location.
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