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Salix alba Golden Ness - White Willow
Salix alba Golden Ness - White Willow
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Dispatch by letter from €3.90.
Delivery charge from €5.90 Oversize package delivery charge from €6.90.
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This plant carries a 24 months recovery warranty
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We guarantee the quality of our plants for a full growing cycle, and will replace at our expense any plant that fails to recover under normal climatic and planting conditions.
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Salix alba 'Golden Ness' is a cultivar of White Willow appreciated for its amber-coloured stems. It forms a medium-sized tree, but it is often grown as a bushy shrub, controlled by pruning. Its golden-yellow new shoots shine in winter and its green foliage turns yellow in autumn before falling and revealing the vibrant stems. Pruning reduces it to a 2m tall shrub and has the advantage of producing more colourful stems for winter display. This variety derived from Salix alba var. vitellina has a flexible wood. It has been awarded the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.
Native to wet areas of the Northern Hemisphere, particularly Europe, temperate Asia, and North Africa, Salix alba is a highly adaptable tree with rapid growth that can reach 20m in height and 10-12m in width. It belongs to the Salicaceae family and the Salix genus, which includes no less than 300 species distributed in the cold regions of the Northern Hemisphere. 'Golden Ness' is derived from the subspecies vitellina with soft, yellow wood. It has a generally rounded habit, with the tree developing one or several trunks topped by a very wide crown. The long, flexible branches are coppery-yellow and hairy when young, then they become more grey. They bear deciduous leaves that are 10cm long, narrow, and lanceolate in shape. Both sides of the leaf are silky, with the upper side being shiny and deep green and the underside white-silver. They turn yellow before falling in autumn. Flowering occurs in April-May, at the same time as the young leaves appear. The male catkins are thin, 3-5cm long, arched and spreading, and yellowish. The female catkins are smaller, denser, and green. The bark of this tree becomes greyish-brown with age, longitudinally fissured, and takes on a corky appearance. It has a powerful tap-root and extensively spreading roots, perfectly adapted to deep and unstable soils. For this reason, it is advisable to keep this willow away from ducts. White willow is also a medicinal plant, with its bark being the original source of aspirin. The Salix alba can reach the venerable age of 100 years.
The 'Golden Ness' willow is often pruned to maintain a bushy shrub size. Regularly pruned and planted closely together, it can form a beautiful windbreak hedge at the edge of the garden. Its silvery foliage is valuable for bringing light to a darker setting, for example at the countryside borders. Among the plants that can accompany it near water, you can find horsetails, reeds, loosestrifes, daylilies, Scirpus, and Typha angustifolia, for example.
Tips: Collect the fallen leaves in autumn and burn them if the tree shows black spots (anthracnose) or yellow-orange spots (rust) during its growth. Once all the leaves have fallen, treat with Bordeaux mixture.
Plant habit
Flowering
Foliage
Botanical data
Salix alba Golden Ness is best planted in autumn, from September to November, in any moist or wet, fairly heavy, rich soil, in a sunny position. Water and mulch young plants. Once well established in deep soil, it will manage on its own. To limit its growth, prune all branches periodically and severely to form what is called a pollarded tree, a kind of stump from which numerous shoots grow. A short pruning of this kind during winter is often the best way to contain anthracnose attacks (black spots, cracks).
Planting period
Intended location
Care
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Hardiness is the lowest winter temperature a plant can endure without suffering serious damage or even dying. However, hardiness is affected by location (a sheltered area, such as a patio), protection (winter cover) and soil type (hardiness is improved by well-drained soil).
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The flowering period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions located in USDA zone 8 (France, the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Netherlands, etc.)
It will vary according to where you live:
In temperate climates, pruning of spring-flowering shrubs (forsythia, spireas, etc.) should be done just after flowering.
Pruning of summer-flowering shrubs (Indian Lilac, Perovskia, etc.) can be done in winter or spring.
In cold regions as well as with frost-sensitive plants, avoid pruning too early when severe frosts may still occur.
The planting period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions located in USDA zone 8 (France, United Kingdom, Ireland, Netherlands).
It will vary according to where you live:
The harvesting period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions in USDA zone 8 (France, England, Ireland, the Netherlands).
In colder areas (Scandinavia, Poland, Austria...) fruit and vegetable harvests are likely to be delayed by 3-4 weeks.
In warmer areas (Italy, Spain, Greece, etc.), harvesting will probably take place earlier, depending on weather conditions.
The sowing periods indicated on our website apply to countries and regions within USDA Zone 8 (France, UK, Ireland, Netherlands).
In colder areas (Scandinavia, Poland, Austria...), delay any outdoor sowing by 3-4 weeks, or sow under glass.
In warmer climes (Italy, Spain, Greece, etc.), bring outdoor sowing forward by a few weeks.