Oenothera fruticosa is a day-blooming member of the Evening Primrose family. It produces basal rosettes, and single 15 to 30" rigid stems that are lightly pubescent, tinged with red, and bearing lance-shaped alternate leaves. The flowering stems are terminally branched and produce an abundance of bright yellow poppy-shaped flowers that are up to 2" in diameter. Individual flowers are short-lived, but the blooming period is long, extending for 2 months or more between late-spring and mid-summer. As fall progresses, new basal rosettes will form that will persist through winter, and acquire purple and bronze hues as the cold weather sets in.
Narrowleaf evening primrose is a care-free species and a good choice for tough spaces. It is shallow-rooted and will spread via stolons that are just below the ground's surface. It is however non-aggressive and its spread can easily be controlled by plucking out unwanted plants. Its preference is full sun, but it does remarkably well as a filler plant shaded by taller growing perennials, where the evergreen rosettes will also serve as a green mulch. It is not particular about soil, and will thrive in rich, moist, well-drained ones, just as readily as in poor, dry ones. [source: izelplants.com]
Larval Host for the
1-1.5'
1-2'
SIZE
SOIL
Dry, Acid, Average, Loamy, Clay, Sandy, Rocky
LIGHT
Sun, Part Shade
BENEFITS
Butterflies
NOTES
A smaller, secondary bloom can occur early in fall, which can be encouraged by cutting back spent flowering stems before they go to seed.
CHARACTERISTICS
Will Naturalize, Tolerates Clay, Showy Flowers, Deer Resistant
May, June, July
Flower
This
flowers in
Narrowleaf Evening Primrose
Oenothera fruticosa
DETAIL VIEW
DESCRIPTION
Oenothera fruticosa is a day-blooming member of the Evening Primrose family. It produces basal rosettes, and single 15 to 30" rigid stems that are lightly pubescent, tinged with red, and bearing lance-shaped alternate leaves. The flowering stems are terminally branched and produce an abundance of bright yellow poppy-shaped flowers that are up to 2" in diameter. Individual flowers are short-lived, but the blooming period is long, extending for 2 months or more between late-spring and mid-summer. As fall progresses, new basal rosettes will form that will persist through winter, and acquire purple and bronze hues as the cold weather sets in.
Narrowleaf evening primrose is a care-free species and a good choice for tough spaces. It is shallow-rooted and will spread via stolons that are just below the ground's surface. It is however non-aggressive and its spread can easily be controlled by plucking out unwanted plants. Its preference is full sun, but it does remarkably well as a filler plant shaded by taller growing perennials, where the evergreen rosettes will also serve as a green mulch. It is not particular about soil, and will thrive in rich, moist, well-drained ones, just as readily as in poor, dry ones. [source: izelplants.com]