Q I have heard of a plant called highbush cranberry. Does this plant really produce cranberries that you could eat? A Highbush cranberry is a common name that's used for the viburnum species Viburnum ...
Out among the bare tree branches of late November, any reddish berries will become obvious. Add a snow cover of early winter, and these fruited wooded plants are even easier to see. And they are still ...
I recently returned from a very low-tech week in the Cariboo with our youngest daughter, riding horses through quaking aspen, lodgepole pine and black cottonwood forest, and using a wood stove for ...
The highbush cranberry shrub isn’t a true cranberry, although the berries are similar in both taste and appearance. The Latin name is Viburnum opulus var. americanum, which is important to know if you ...
Add structure and ornament to your garden with Viburnum opulus 'Compactum,' a deciduous shrub with bright red, translucent berries and warm red foliage. 'Compactum' grows about 5 feet high and wide; ...