The listing, Winterberry Holly Shrub 5 Seeds has ended.
Winterberry is a deciduous holly native to eastern North America where it typically occurs in swamps, damp thickets, low woods and along ponds and streams. It is a slow growing, large deciduous shrub or small tree with an upright rounded habit that typically grows 3 to 12 feet tall. The trunk is short and generally branches close to the ground and the stout, upright, spreading branches bear slender twiggy branchlets, producing a rounded crown, 8 to12 feet across. Winterberry often suckers and grows in a multi-stemmed clump and may form a thicket of erect stems. Leaves are elliptic to obovate, toothed, dark green, 2 to 3 inches long. Fall color is usually negligible, but in some years leaves may turn attractive shades of maroon. If the leaves haven't fallen by the first hard frost, they turn black, hence the common name, "Black Alder." Relatively inconspicuous greenish-white flowers appear in the leaf axils in late spring. Flowers, if properly pollinated, give way to a crop of glossy bright red 1/4 inch berries in late summer to fall. Berries are quite showy and will persist throughout the winter (hence the common name) and often into early spring. Berries provide considerable impact and interest to the winter landscape.