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![]() American BittersweetPods Split at Frost, Reveal Red Berries
(5 customer reviews)Orange seedpods, scarlet fruit—handsome trained to fence or trellis. Both male and female plants provided for proper fruit production. Climbs to 20 ft. Potted. Zones 3-8. Not available in CT, MA, NC, NH and VT. This item will ship in fall 2012. If our fall shipping season is closed, your order will be shipped the following fall. Product Details
Customer Reviews Overall Rating:
![]() Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers Sort Reviews: Newest | Oldest | Highest Rating | Lowest Rating - Tuesday, August 31, 2010DANGER!!! Reviewed By: elizabeth (boston, MA) This is A TERRIBLE DESTRUCTIVE PLANT THAT WILL ESCAPE WITH UNDERGROUND RHIZOMES AND SEEDS AND KILLS ENTIRE TREES AND HUGE AREAS ARE DESTROYED OF NATIVE PLANTS AND ANIMALS DUE TO ITS INCREDIBLE STRENGTH! IT CANT BE KILLED OR PULLED OUT COMPKLETELY ONCE IT GETS GOING!! DO NOT AID IN THIS VIRULENT PLANT SPREADING!! READ ABOUT THIS PRETTY BUT DESTRUCTIVE PLANT ONLINE!! IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO GET RID OF!!ALSO VERY POISONOUS! - Monday, September 20, 2010Native versus Invasive Reviewed By: Debbie Maurer (Grayslake, Illinois) American Bittersweet (Celastrus scandens) produces berries and fruits only at the end of the branches (terminally), while the Asian Bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatus) produces fruit all along the branches, in multiple clusters. Based on the photo, this plant appears to be the Asian Bittersweet, which is very invasive and problematic throughout the eastern US and Midwest, especially when it escapes into native woodlands. - Monday, September 13, 2010Good vine Reviewed By: Kathy (Kokomo, IN) The Asian bittersweet is virulent! American bittersweet is NOT. It grows easily and is beautiful and vigorous. It needs a male to pollinate it. No boy, no berries. I'm in zone 5. Read More Reviews |
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