Caragana jubata – Peashrub –

Description

Caragana – Peashrub –

There are about 80 species of deciduous, often spiny shrubs or small trees, in this genus. They occur on dry soils in exposed sites from Eastern Europe to Central and Eastern Asia. They are grown for their leaves, which are alternate, pinnate, and often clustered at the branch tips, and their pea-like flowers, which are usually yellow, but sometimes white or pink held singly or in small clusters borne in spring and summer. Flowers are followed in autumn by slender straw colored pods, 3/4-2 ½” long. Grow in a shrub border or as windbreaks.

Grow in well drained, moderately fertile soil in full sun. Will thrive even in neutral to slightly alkaline, dry soils in cold and exposed sites. Best where climates have cold winter and hot, dry summers. May become weedy.

C. jubata – This Northern Russian and Chinese species has an open habit and grows 3′ feet tall. It leaves are composed of 4-6 small leaflets on a rather woolly and spiny rachis that persists on the branch after the leaflets have fallen. The flowers are carried singly and are white to pale yellow, usually flushed with red.

Zones 3-9