Mary Snoddy

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Holiday Greenery for Yew-All

My favorite fresh greenery for holiday decorating is Yew or its close associates. I love the look and scent of fir, pine, and eastern red cedar (which is really a member of the Juniperus genus, not Cedrus, but why quibble over the name?). My garden SC is too warm for growing fir, so any branches I acquire have been shipped from a cooler zone, meaning they are not freshly cut. Pines are abundant throughout our woodlands, and the scent is evocative of Christmas celebrations, but the cut ends of branches exude a sticky sap that is difficult to remove. Eastern red cedar also has a wonderful fragrance. Some trees are adorned with powdery blue berries. It does not take long for berries to shed and cut cedar to dry out. Then it becomes brittle and scratchy, shedding profusely. This is why Yew or Plum Yew is my seasonal greenery of choice.

The “real” Yew is in the Taxus genus. It has short, dark green needles that are easy to use in wreaths and indoor holiday arrangements. It is not as heat tolerant as the Cephalotaxus genus, commonly called Plum Yew. Plum Yew needles are longer than Taxus. It is available in low/prostrate, medium/shrubby or tall/skinny forms. ‘Prostrata’ is a short, spreading evergreen shrub for shade. It reaches two feet in height but spreads up to six feet wide.  It makes a perfect foundation plant for shady areas under low windows or the north side of a home.  ‘Duke Gardens’ is taller but narrower, reaching up to five feet in height but maybe six feet wide. Its branches are angled upward, typically described as vase shaped. I was today-years-old when I learned that the name is Duke Gardens and not Duke’s Garden. Both the prostrate form and the vase-shape form require partial shade to full shade. Their needles are held in almost flat planes, though they tend to angle upward when grown in more sun. The tall, narrow form, Cepahalotaxus harringtonia ‘Fastigiata,’ will take more light that the last two, although it still prefers to be shielded from direct afternoon sun. Its needles spiral around the stem. All forms are slow growing, which means low-maintenance. In my cut flower arrangements, ‘Fastigiata’ makes a great filler and will stay fresh looking and needles will stay soft for several weeks as long as its stems are in water. 

Once they are established, Plum Yews are heat-tolerant and moderately drought-tolerant. Deer normally pass them by. 

A Plum Yew lookalike is Podocarpus, commonly called Japanese Yew. Its needles are longer than Plum Yew. In the landscape, it will take a lot more sun than Plum Yew but it is not as cold-tolerant and it will not tolerate wet soils. Podocarpus can be sheared into hedges or pruned into topiary.

The new growth on this Cephalotaxus harringtonia is a bright green. The small size of the spring growth spurt tells the gardener that this is a slow growing, low maintenance plant.

This fastigiate Plum Yew was in an area of my garden that received morning sun. To compensate, I gave it a little water during the hottest months. This is a mature specimen, ten feet tall and five feet wide.

These prostrate Plum Yews are low to the ground. Here they are used to edge a path. They would be idea under low windows on the shady side of a home.