| Trees | Shrubs | Perennials | Fruit Trees | Turf Grass | Vines | Rose Bushes | Garden Center | Seeds | Flower Bulbs | Small Fruits | Annuals
You are here: Home > Shrubs > Euonymus - Tures Burning Bush
Euonymus - Tures Burning BushPrice Each
$23.95
Euonymus - Tures Burning Bush:
The Tures Burning Bush Euonymus, Euonymus alatus 'Tures', is a nice uniform selection of Euonymus Alatus which resembles Compacta, except that it has larger GǣcorkyGǥ twigs and larger, brilliant scarlet, almost fluorescent fall color. Its fall color is a very uniform deep red-purple in a sunny location. It will begin to redden in August, in full fiery color in September, and holds its leaves until October. 'Tures' is excellent for hedges, screens, mass plantings or as a specimen. A symmetrical form is achieved with little to no pruning. 'Tures' has corky wings on stems that adds winter interest. It is an adaptable shrub which tolerates a wide range of soils and full shade, but will not tolerate wet, poorly-drained soil.
Join "Garden Notes" and plan for Harvest Success as you track and record your gardening progress. Your Free Personal Garden Journal has pages for jotting down notes on the seeds you start, your new plantings, when you fertilized, and even a graph to plot a new garden.
"A team grew fruit, vegetables and reared cattle on adjacent organic and non-organic sites across Europe. They found up to 40% more antioxidants could be found in organic fruit and vegetables than in non-organic.
The team said the findings call into question the current stance of the Food Standards Agency (FSA), which is neither for nor against organic food."Free
Gardening Catalog
Click Here
A book full of valuable information on how to harvest fresh vegetables and salad ingredients literally year-round--yet without an expensive greenhouse or indoor light garden set-up. Coleman combines succession planting (small sowings three or more times, rather than one big endeavor) with cold-frame growing in the winter months. He includes how-tos for building simple cold-frames.
Declare your yard a "Pesticide Free" Zone!
... and spread the word! Once you've converted your lawn, let the neighborhood know --
maybe you can persuade others. You can
Proclaim Organic Pest Control!
to post and get tips on
talking to neighbors from the Washington Toxics Coalition.