Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Lilac Bush w/ seed pods

Syringa vulgaris

Description:

Botanical name: Syringa Plant type: Shrub Flower color: Red, Pink, Yellow, Blue, Purple, White Bloom time: Spring, Summer Who doesn't love lilacs? The ideal lilac shrub has about 10 canes and produces flowers at eye-level—all the better to enjoy that sweet, haunting fragrance. Lilacs do come in seven colors but most are familiar with the common lilac, Syringa vulgaris, which blooms in the northern states for 2 weeks in late May. However, there are early-, mid-, and late-season lilacs, which, when grown together, ensure a steady bloom for at least 6 weeks. Lilacs are hardy, easy to grow, and low maintenance. They can grow from 5 to 15 feet tall, depending on the variety. The fragrant flowers are good for cutting and attractive to butterflies. Planting If you're lucky, a friend will give you a sucker, or offshoot, of the root system of one of his plants. Your sucker will look pathetic at first but just dig a hole, backfill it with soil, and stick the sucker in. Then water and wait. In 4 or 5 years, you'll be rewarded with huge, fragrant blossoms. Transplanting lilacs from a nursery is also easy. If it's container-grown, spread out the roots as you settle the plant into the ground; if it's balled or burlapped, gentle remove it and any rope before filling in the hole. Water and wait. Space multiple lilac shrubs 5 to 15 feet apart, depending on the variety. Care Each spring, apply a layer of compost under the plant, followed by mulch to retain moisture and control weeds. Water during the summer if rainfall is less than 1 inch per week. Lilacs won't bloom if they're overfertilized. They can handle a handful of 10-10-10 in late winter, but no more. After your lilac bush has finished blooming, spread some lime and well-rotted manure around the base. Trim the bush to shape it, and remove suckers at the same time. Pruning Lilacs Lilacs bloom on old wood, so it's critical to prune in the spring right after they bloom. If you prune later in the summer, you may be removing the wood. Here's a tip: If your lilac flower clusters are getting smaller, time to prune! Every year after bloom, remove any dead wood. Prune out the oldest canes (down to the ground). Remove the small suckers. Cut back weak branches to a strong shoot. Cut back tall canes to eye height. If your lilac is old and in really bad shape, remove one-third of the oldest canes (down to the ground) in year one, half of the remaining old wood in year two, and the rest of the old wood in year three. Then, following a normal pruning program (as mentioned in above point). Another option for an old lilac is to chop the whole thing back to about 6 or 8 inches high. It sounds drastic, but lilacs are very hardy. The downside to this option is that it takes a few years to grow back. The upside is less work and more reward, as the lilac will grow back bursting with blooms. Pests Prone to attack by slugs and snails. Powder white mildew may appear after a summer of hot, humid weather. It may be unsightly, but it does no harm. Ignore it. Recommended Varieties The most common and fragrant lilacs are of the S. vulgaris variety: For early bloom, try 'Charles Joly', a double magneta. Mid-season lilacs include 'Monge', a dark reddish purple, and 'Firmament', a fine blue. Late-season beauties include 'Miss Canada', a reddishpink, and 'Donald Wyman', a single purple. Although common lilacs love cold weather, a few thrive as south as Zone 9, among them the cutleaf lilac, a fragrant pale lavender. Syringa patula 'Miss Kim' is a graceful shrub with pale lilac-blue flowers that fade to white. Special Features Attracts Butterflies Wit & Wisdom To improve the flowering of lilacs, keep the grass from growing around them. A 16- to 24-inch circle of landscape cloth placed around the bushes and covered with bark or stone will keep the grass down. Force a winter bouquet from cut branches of lilac. Bruise the cut ends and set them in water. Spray the branches frequently. Keep them in a cool place until they bloom, then move to a warmer area for display. Poet Walt Whitman thought of lilacs when Abraham Lincoln died: "When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom'd . . . I mourn'd, and yet hall mourn with ever-returning spring."

Habitat:

USDA Hardiness Zones: 3 Sun exposure: Full Sun, Part Sun Soil type: Any Soil pH: Neutral to Slightly Alkaline Grow lilacs in fertile, humus-rich, well-drained, neutral to alkaline soil (at a pH near 7.0). If your soil is in poor condition, add compost to enrich. Select a site where your lilac will get full sun—at least 6 hours. If lilacs don't get enough sun, they will not bloom well. Make sure the site drains well. Lilacs don't like wet feet and will not bloom with too much water. Plant in either spring or fall, although the latter is preferred.

Notes:

This is the first year I even took time to look at the seed pods of the Lilac trees in my yard. I would love to grown some more!

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

No Comments

Bangor, Maine, USA

Spotted on Oct 3, 2012
Submitted on Oct 3, 2012

Related Spottings

Lilac Common lilac Common Lilac Syringa

Nearby Spottings

Downy Woodpecker Common Yellowthroat Round-leaved Sundew Milkweed
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team