yardener flower logo - click to go to home page
Search Yardener
       Yardener's Advisor Newsletter: Sign In / Subscribe

  • Home
  • Information
    • Plant Helper
    • Toolshed
    • Plant Problem Solver
    • Toolshed of Products
  • Blogs
    • Jeff's Blog
    • Nancy's Blog
  • Ask Jeff
  • Q&A
  • About Us

Home Page > Yardener's Plant Helper > Landscape Plant Files > Files About Shrubs > Shrub Files > Hypericum
Hypericum
  • Caring For Hypericum
  • Planting Hypericum
  • Problems of Hypericum
  • Using Hypericum in Landscape
Search Our Site
Newsletter Subscription
Yardner's Advisor Newsletter provides information just for plants in your yard!

Hypericum

Hypericum (Hypericum patulum henryi)
Hypericums [hi-PER-ick-umz] are colorful, useful plants, many of which are suitable for residential yards and gardens. Known also as St. John's wort they are valued for their long summer flowering and tolerance of substandard growing conditions. Henry St. John's-wort is a woody shrub that is evergreen or semi-evergreen in mild climates. Extremely sturdy, it is one of the most widely grown hypericums.

Size: Henry hypericum shrubs grow to about 2 feet by 2 feet after 5 years, to 3 feet by 3 feet after 10 years, and to 4 feet by 4 feet at maturity. They grow vigorously when young, sending up many upright stems which branch near their tips. Growth is rapid in the spring, slowing as the season progresses. As the shrubs age, their growth rate declines. In the warm deep South they will grow even more vigorously.

Foliage: Hypericum leaves are narrowly oval, from 1 to 3 inches long and 1 inch wide. A clear medium green occasionally tinged with red, they grow opposite each other along the stems. In the South they may persist well into the fall and through the winter providing some yellow or purple color. In cold northern regions the leaves drop in the late fall.

Flowers and Fruit: Hypericum flowers are bright yellow, spanning 2 1/2 to 3 inches across. They are an open cup-shape, with 5 broad petals surrounding a delicate cluster of stamens. Blooms appear in profusion at the tips of the stems in the early summer, often lasting well into autumn. They do not have any fragrance. Hypericum fruits are inconspicuous dry pods.

Hypericum Choices
`Sungold'is the hardiest of the Henry hypericums: `Hidcote' is considered by many to be the best for flowers. `Rowallane' is taller than average, grows to 6 feet.
For more information see file on Selecting Shrubs.




  • Caring For Hypericum
  • Planting Hypericum
  • Problems of Hypericum
  • Using Hypericum in Landscape
©2003-2009 Yardener.com, All Rights Reserved