Also known as the American cranberry bush, this native deciduous shrub will grow in moist to wet soil with well-drained loams in areas with partial shade to full sun. Although it thrives in these ...
When the pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock in 1620, they encountered thornless vines covered with small, red fruit growing in boggy regions of the area. Native Americans valued this fruit and called it ...
Guelder roses have bright red berries that will certainly attract birds to your yard, but this is one shrub that you'll want ...
Although there are many possible replacements for winged burning bush, here are three lovely suggestions that you might want to consider: black chokeberry (Aronia melanocarpa), American cranberry ...
to the horticulturally significant Paw Paw or American Cranberry Bush. Everything from groundcovers and vines to grasses and trees are represented. The guide is available at select locations ...
The maintenance-free bushes, which top out at about moose-head height, prefer direct sun and modest moisture, but they also grow in part-sun in our backyard rain garden. Small highbush cranberry ...
You can witness stunning red fruits appear on the American cranberry bush viburnum (Viburnum opulus var. americanum) that cedar wax wings and grosbeaks love. The nannyberry viburnum (Viburnum ...
An ongoing debate is whether you should you serve cranberry sauce warm or cold. This is a matter of personal choice. The sauce is clearly thicker when chilled, but when used as a topping for ...
(1 pound of cranberries makes 2 ½ pounds of sauce.) *The American Cranberry Exchange, which Eatmor brand was part of, is defunct. The organization dissolved in 1957 after 50 years. Use any brand ...
American highbush cranberry bush, hazelnut, elderberry, river birch, white cedar, American plum, black spruce, domestic apple and new this year, red maple and basswood. Tree tubes are also ...