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James H. Schutte
(Orange-eye Butterflybush, White Ball Butterflybush)
Grown for its many elongated clusters of white flowers, the dwarf butterflybush ‘White Ball’ is a tough shrub with a neat compact habit. For many, this heavy and long-flowering selection is one of the best smaller Buddleja out there.
This butterflybush has grey-green leaves and produces clusters of numerous tiny tubular white flowers with orange eyes. These are lightly fragrant and appear at the ends of the branches. They will continue to bloom with greater regularity if spent flowers...
Gerald L. Klingaman
(Orange-eye Butterflybush, White Bouquet Butterflybush)
Grown for its elongated clusters of fragrant white flowers, the compact butterflybush ‘White Bouquet’ is a tough shrub with a bushy spreading habit. It is an older cultivar that was first introduced in 1942.
This butterflybush has gray-green leaves and produces clusters of numerous tiny tubular white flowers with orange eyes. These are fragrant and appear at the ends of the branches. They will continue to bloom with greater regularity if spent flowers are removed. It is also important to remove...
Gerald L. Klingaman
(Orange-eye Butterflybush, White Profusion Butterflybush)
Grown for its large conical clusters of white flowers, the compact butterflybush ‘White Profusion’ is a tough shrub with a bushy spreading habit. It is an older cultivar that was first introduced in 1945.
This butterflybush has gray-green leaves and produces clusters of numerous tiny tubular white flowers with yellow eyes. These are fragrant and appear at the ends of the branches. They will continue to bloom with greater regularity if spent flowers are removed. It is also important to remove...
(Orange-eye Butterflybush, White Spreader Butterflybush)
Grown for its large elongated clusters of white flowers, the very compact butterflybush ‘White Spread’ is a tough shrub with a bushy spreading habit. It is a Dutch cultivar that is highly useful in the landscape.
This butterflybush has gray-green leaves and produces clusters of numerous tiny tubular white flowers. These are fragrant and appear at the ends of the branches. They will continue to bloom with greater regularity if spent flowers are removed. It is also important to remove the spent...
(Orange-eye Butterflybush, Windy Hill Butterflybush)
Grown for its large elongated clusters of purple flowers, the tall hardy butterflybush ‘Windy Hill’ is a tough shrub with an upright to vase-shaped habit. It was selected and introduced by Dennis Mareb or Windy Hill Nursery in Great Barrington, Massachusetts.
This butterflybush has gray-green leaves and produces clusters of numerous tiny tubular purple flowers with orange eyes. These are lightly fragrant and appear at the ends of the branches. They will continue to bloom with greater regularity...
Jessie Keith
(Butterflybush, Orange-eye Butterflybush)
Developed by Elizabeth Keep in East Malling, England, the Buddleja cultivars in the English Butterflyâ„¢ series have a dwarf habit, dense branching and large elongated flower clusters that come in various shades.
Asian in origin, butterflybush is a sweet deciduous to semi-evergreen shrub with open, upright to arching branches lined with lance-shaped gray-green leaves. From midsummer to frost many large, elongated flowers clusters in shades of purple and blue appear. These are like manna...
James H. Schutte
(Orange-eye Butterflybush, Petite Snow® Butterflybush)
Grown for its large elongated clusters of white flowers, the compact butterflybush Petite Snowâ„¢ is a tough shrub with a bushy spreading habit. This fine cultivar was introduced in 1984 by Monrovia Nurseries in Azusa, California and is considered to be the best of all the white-flowered Buddleja.
This butterflybush has gray-green leaves and produces clusters of numerous tiny tubular white flowers. These are fragrant and appear at the ends of the branches. They will continue to bloom...
(Gloster Butterflybush, Lindley's Butterflybush)
This Victorian heirloom is found at older home sites of the southeastern U.S. where the climate is mild. The extreme vigor and deer resistance of ‘Gloster,’ as well as its wide adaptability allowed it to naturalize in many woodlands of that region. The parent species is native to southeastern China and was introduced into the Carolinas over a century ago, and this selection never really caught on in gardens. This may be due to the greater success of showy Buddleia davidii cultivars with...