Looking to grow a stunning white Azalea, or two?
Deciduous Azaleas offer spectacular spring flowers in the PNW, they come in a variety of colors & can be a stunning addition to any landscape. Use these specimens in most garden locations, except deep shade. They love our moist, acidic soils & can be pruned easily after bloom each spring to be kept compact. Some offer fragrance as a bonus, but all are showy in bloom & super cold hardy. Feed with an organic fertilizer in early spring & again in early summer for best growth. They can be mulched, but be careful as to not bury the crowns. Deciduous Azaleas also offer the bonus of nice fall color too, before losing their leaves for winter!
Check out some of the many varieties we have to offer...
(HEIGHTS ARE 10 YEAR ESTIMATES & BLOOM TIMES ARE APPROXIMATE)
*Please contact us to find out more about our current availability*
We are a retail garden center servicing our local communities & currently not able to ship our products
Fragrant Star
A fragrant, deciduous azalea named for its extremely aromatic, large, five-petaled, snowy white flowers that top the blue-green foliage on a strong, upright habit. Relatively cold hardy and heat tolerant for an azalea, and powdery mildew resistant. Mass in the dappled shade or perimeter of a woodland garden, or add to a mixed shrub border. Blooms mid spring & reaches roughly 4 feet tall by 4 feet wide in size.
Weston's Innocence
Super fragrant white flowers are openly funnel-shaped with wavy edges & held on dome-shaped trusses of about 8 flowers. Leaves are a glossy green color, tinged bronze when new. Has a dense plant habit. Blooms late spring & reaches roughly 4 feet tall by 4 feet wide in size.
Check out other Deciduous Azaleas, Evergreen Azaleas or Rhododendrons!
Get our printable 2024 Rhodie & Azalea List, right here!
*Our availability changes constantly, so please contact us for more detailed information*
If for some reason you can't find what you're looking for in our stock, you can order directly from Monrovia & have it shipped here to the nursery for FREE!
I often tell gardeners in our region to rediscover their “Evergreen State”, which (in a play on words) simply means to show some gardening style with the structure, texture and color of conifers. Around here nature has the many shades of green covered, but how about some bold blues and bright yellows? When all of the deciduous shrubs and trees have…