Culture
Easily grown in average, medium moisture, well-drained soil in full sun to part shade. Prefers moist loams, but tolerates a wide range of soils. Best with consistent and even moisture. Prune as needed immediately after flowering.
Noteworthy Characteristics
Viburnum plicatum is a dense, upright, multi-stemmed, deciduous shrub that typically matures to 8-15’ tall with a slightly larger spread. Ovate, toothed, strongly-veined, dark green leaves (to 4” long) have pleated upper surfaces. Leaves turn burgundy red to purplish red in fall. Two different forms of this shrub are commonly sold in commerce: (1) Japanese snowball bush (f. plicatum) which is the type form featuring sterile, snowball-like, orbicular inflorescences (2-3” diameter cymes) of non-fragrant, showy white flowers along the branches in spring with no subsequent fruit and (2) doublefile viburnum (f. tomentosum) which is the wild-related taxon featuring fertile, flat-topped flower clusters (2-4” diameter cymes) which bloom along tiered horizontal branches in doublefile form, each cluster containing an outer ring of large showy sterile florets surrounding a center mass of tiny non-showy fertile florets which when fertilized give way to egg-shaped fruits and viable seed. Bloom time of f. plicatum typically occurs about two weeks later than that of f. tomentosum. Mature height of f. plicatum may rise to as much as 15’ tall, but mature height of f. tomentosum typically will not exceed 10’ tall. Except as to flower structure, bloom time, height and branching habit, both forms are otherwise very similar and commonly sold in commerce under a number of different cultivar names.
The sterile snowball form (f. plicatum) is known from cultivation only (first observed as a garden plant in Japan). It was discovered prior in time to the discovery of the wild fertile doublefile form (f. tomentosum) from which it was actually developed. As a result of this inverted schedule of discovery, the sterile form was mistakenly given a species name (Viburnum plicatum) and the subsequently discovered fertile form (f. tomentosum) was named as if it were a variety of the species. The wild form (f. tomentosum) is native to forests and thickets in China and Japan.
Forma tomentosum has fine hairs on young stems and leaf undersides.
Genus name comes from the Latin name of a species plant.
Specific epithet means pleated or folded in reference to leaf veins.
'Weeping Magic' is a compact cultivar with pendulous (weeping) branches. It typically grows as a low-mounded shrub to only 4' tall spreading to 6' wide. White flowers in doublefile form bloom above the foliage in May. Flowers are followed by red fruits. Leaves typically drop early in fall prior to the development of quality fall color. Introduced by Willoway Nurseries, Avon, Ohio.
Problems
No serious insect or disease problems. Squirrels have been known to eat unopened flower buds in late winter which can result in reduced blooming or a lack of blooms altogether.
Uses
Specimen or groups. Shrub borders, foundations or hedges.
Distinctive weeping form is attractive in the landscape.