Edible Gardening

Cool Garden Plants🌿🍃



Check out these Cool Plants – In this video I give a tour of some interesting plants at Panther Creek Nursery. They have lots of really interesting plants.

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34 Comments

  1. I’d really like to see bushes with edible fruit. I know there has to be more than blueberries. Just a thought

  2. I took a chance and divided a purple smoke bush into 4 standard, each about 2 feet tall…left some roots on each…we’ll see if they survive🤞🏽🙂

  3. I took a chance and divided a purple smoke bush into 4 standards, each about 2 feet tall…left some roots on each…we’ll see if they survive🤞🏽🙂

  4. I like seeing the espalier and tree form plants. Thank you for explaining how long it takes to grow some of these.

  5. I think you just told me that my fall planted zone 6 camellia isn’t going to make it this winter ?🎄🎄🎄🎄🎄❄️💚🙃

  6. Thanks to your videos I’ve recently purchased two Stellar Ruby Magnolias for my small lot in a neighborhood. I think these will be the perfect accent trees that I’ve been looking for!

  7. Jim, thanks for the tour of Panther Creek. I was able to get my plant guy from the Farmers Market in Raleigh to pick me up a big order of the things you showed in the first video.

    Black Pines, Juniper Topiaries and Burke’s Pine…oh my!

  8. When you were introducing the "Dee Runk" boxwood, I thought you were getting ready to ID it as a "National" holly. I bought a "National" years ago at a tiny garden center in Gowansville, SC near Campobello and loved it so much, but never could find any other. It is also columnar in growth. I propagated it to my heart's content and have a wonderful row of them. I wonder if the name was just an error and it is really a "Dee Runk." Have you heard of "National" boxwood?

  9. While looking for a "Stellar Ruby" magnolia, I came upon an already-sold "Gordonia" which I loved even more, so I'm holding the place for it instead. I've never heard you mention this plant. Have you come across one and do you have any thoughts on it in zone 7-B? So many cool plants in this video! Thanks!

  10. Okay please tell me what I'm supposed to do if I would like to have things you show, but they only sell wholesale?

  11. I was helping an elderly couple with plants while shopping at Home Depot today. I recommended your channels Jim. Extending your reach!

  12. I am a fellow North Carolinian in the Triangle and love your videos (I'm non-native, lol). Your comments about lawn lovers and leaf blowing nuts crack me up. My husband is a leaf blowing, weed whacking fool! He was infuriated that I had a local arborist dump free wood chips in my yard (10 yards at a time), and then I saw your video on the importance of wood chips and I made him watch it. My trusty arborist dumped another 20 yards of wood chips this week–ha-ha. I make sure he delivers them when my human leaf blower is away, only this time he was home. Give Holly a scratch behind the ears from me. Oh, I wonder whether she likes rolling in fresh wood chips as much as my hound?

  13. Great vid as always! Lucky you didn’t have to don the bio haz suit 😝

  14. 8:15 I've been wondering what poncirus trifoliata was for years after seeing it at The National Arboretum in DC. It's structure is so cool. You're the best. Thanks for sharing.

  15. Oh more plant goodness..thank you! Dreaming of a bigger yard lol That yuletide camelia is awesome..I have 3 Teddy Bear and absolutely love them. Nearly killed them cause I planted too deep but with your help I was able to save them and they are doing well now.

  16. I have an Illicium that looks just like that, except it's called Pink Frost. The variegation gets pinkish when the weather turns cold. It really does smell amazing. I'm borderline zone 6/7 so am keeping my eye on it. A few mornings it's looked pretty wilted and defeated, but by mid day perked up again. If we get cold wind I'll probably need to cover it. I also have a Flying Dragon, which is a super cool plant. It's a slow grower so far, no fruit yet, but no one else on my street has one.

  17. Fascinating to see Poncirus trifoliata Flying Dragon grown as an ornamental. In Australia it's mostly used as a citrus rootstock (grafting), for dwarfing fruiting varieties of citrus (oranges, lemons, limes, mandarins).
    Noticed it's very drought tolerant, can remain leafless (in warm seasons) for many months, during subtropical droughts.

  18. I just love when you do these type videos! It's like having a personal tour guide on a shopping trip! As you go through I write down the plants/shrubs I'm interested in and look for those in my area. Thanks so much for sharing these videos with us.

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