Gardening Magazine

The Magic of Witch Hazel

By Lochnessgarden @lochnessgarden
Witch Hazel, I remember it from my childhood…..a transparent liquid in a half pint bottle, administered when I can home bruised after a day at the local park, a not infrequent event.
I think it is still around and I remember keeping a bottle in my fridge for years when my children were small.
The magic of Witch HazelWitch Hazel, Hamamelis mollis is a wonderful shrub, a thing of legend.
These beautiful shrubs flower on bare branches before the leaves.
Hamamelis mollis Pallida is a lovely sulfur yellow variant that flowers in the icy grip of January. The spidery petals are long and with a delicate perfume that rises when in the warmth of a room.
The magic of Witch HazelThere are darker coloured variants, two of which we grow. Jalena with coppery yellow flowers and Diane, a coppery red.
They are very nice shrubs , but as they flower later in late February/March they somehow don’t seem to make the impact of the early flowering Pallida.
All make an impact in autumn with wonderful rich yellow and red colourings.
Witch hazel is one of those glorious shrubs that you dream of having in your garden.
At Abriachan we had the chance and we planted Hamamelis mollis Pallida about 15 years ago. It is not exactly slow growing, but seems to take to time and it is only this year that I have felt confident to take a branch or two for the house.
The magic of Witch HazelI love it, a beautiful, classical beauty.
M

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