Diervilla (10 plants)

$69.00 Sold Out
Variety: Magical Starry Night

$5.55 per plant + $1.35 royalty = $6.90 total x10

Diervilla is tough as nails and widely adaptable to various soils and light exposures. Fully hardy, rugged, and long lived.

Magical Starry Night has glossy burgundy foliage. The dainty yellow flowers are short lived, followed by burgundy seed heads. We recommend this for its cut foliage potential, not for its short lived little flowers. 

Hardiness 4-8

Spacing 2-3'

Culture is very similar to Weigela.

Our Weigela Growing Guide

What You'll Receive

Bare root woody plants are just that! Plants with bare roots. They are dug from the field where they were grown, are washed and then stored in the perfect climate over the winter months. This process has many benefits.

Soil is heavy and messy to ship. Removing the soil makes it possible to bring in these hard to find plants from Holland where they are grown by the very folks that breed them.

Soil also can harbor insects and pathogens, so removing plants from soil helps satisfy import requirements of the USDA and ensures you are receiving healthy disease free plant material. The plants are harvested in a dormant state and held that way until they are shipped. They won't even know they have changed countries when they wake up in your garden or field in the springtime. 

Our woody plants are grown in the field in Holland for 1 year before shipping to you. They are pinched a couple of times during the growing season resulting in a stocky well branched plant that will have a good structure on arrival.

These plants will establish quickly in 2025 and you may be able to start harvesting as soon as 2026 on the faster maturing crops. Height will vary, but in general they will be around 12-16" in height.

What To Do With It

All of these plants will ship to you in March at a time approprate for planting. They will be just coming out of dormancy. You may see swelling buds or a bit of new growth, but in general they will be in a dormant state and may look a little dead. Don't worry! They will wake up.

You may see a bit of mold on the roots but this is completely normal. Simply wash it off and plant immediately. As a precaution you can treat the roots with a fungicide or biofungicide, but this isn't necessary. Small broken branches are also of little concern. Just prune off any broken bits and the plant will recover quickly. The root system is the important part at this stage in the game.

If you can't plant immediately on arrival store your bare roots in the cooler. Keep them damp and wrapped in plastic as dry roots are the kiss of death for this type of product. The cold will delay their growth. Keep them from freezing. You can either pot them into 1 gallon pots or plant them directly into your prepared soil. Just make sure to plant them within a few days of arrival. They are waking up and are ready to grow, and they will decline quickly if they are not given soil, water and sunshine.

If they arrive before you can plant outside or before it is reliably above freezing outdoors, pot them, and put them back into your cooler until spring advances. They will start to grow new roots immediately. When you see new buds on the trees and shrubs outdoors it is time to bring them out.

To be honest I am being overly cautious in my recommendations, but these these plants aren't cheap. They are a long term investment that will pay for themselves many times over if you get them through this brief period of transition. Read the directions and success sure to follow.

It is a carefully orchestrated process to get plants quickly from their storage conditions to you so please do your part and be ready to plant them on arrival. There is no reason that these plants will experience any stress if you prepare for their arrival.

Growing Guides

Click here to access our comprehensive growing guides containing everything you need to know about this crop.


Common Name Bush honeysuckle
Genus  Diervilla 
Species ionicera
Family Caprifoliaceae
Life Cycle  deciduous shrub
Format Bare Roots
Care All of these plants will ship to you from Vermont in early April. They will be just coming out of dormancy. You may see swelling buds or a bit of new growth, but in general they will be in a dormant state and may look a little dead. Don't worry! They will wake up.

You may see a bit of mold on the roots but this is completely normal. Simply wash it off and plant immediately. As a precaution you can treat the roots with a fungicide or biofungicide, but this isn't necessary. Small broken branches are also of little concern. Just prune off any broken bits and the plant will recover quickly. The root system is the important part at this stage in the game.

If you can't plant immediately on arrival store your bare roots in the cooler.The cold will delay their growth. Keep them from freezing. You can either pot them into 1 gallon pots or plant them directly into your prepared soil. Just make sure to plant them within a few days of arrival. They are waking up and are ready to grow, and they will decline quickly if they are not given soil, water and sunshine.

This is a carefully orchestrated process to get plants quickly from their storage conditions to you so please do your part and be ready to plant them on arrival. There is no reason that these plants will experience any stress if you prepare for their arrival.
Netting / Staking None
Hardiness Hardiness zones 4-7
Spacing Spacing 3' x 3' Mature height 3-4'
Soil Preference Very tolerant of all sorts of "problem" soils. Adaptable, but prefers moist, well draining soil. 
Light Full sun to part shade. Once established, it doesn't mind sun, shade or drought. The color will be deeper and richer in full sun. 
Water  Drought tolerant when mature. 
When to Plant Spring, when the ground is workable. 
Harvesting Harvest foliage summer through fall. Expect 0 stems in year 1, 3-4 stems in year 2, 6-8 stems in year 3, 10-12 stems in year 4 and 14-16 stems in years 5+
Post Harvest Care Post Harvest guide coming soon
Diseases / Insects No serious insect or disease problems. Watch out for leaf spot and powdery mildew.
Bailey's Notes

Diervilla is yet another underused native plant! Magical Dark Delight is a lovely burgundy strain. I think it would be an excellent cut foliage that can be harvested summer into fall with no fuss. And it will come back year after year. 

Resources

 Missouri Botanic Garden Diervilla ionicera