Honeysuckle "Real": characteristics and properties
In many gardens and orchards, you can observe the bushes of the "real" honeysuckle plant. It is also planted next to private and city houses. Gardeners, agronomists and gardeners appreciate it for its ease of planting, ease of care and the fact that the plant is very unpretentious. The habitat of honeysuckle is simply huge and covers the space from the Volga and the Yenisei to the south of Siberia. Often found in Europe, the Caucasus, Western Siberia. In nature, it grows in forests, near rivers and in ravines.
History reference
This plant is called differently: honeysuckle "forest", "ordinary", and most often "wolfberry". Although the berries of the shrub of this species are not used in cooking, as they are poisonous, it has other uses, from decorative to medicinal.
The Latin name for this type of honeysuckle is Lonicera Xylosteum. The generic name was received by her in honor of the botanist, Doctor of Physical and Mathematical Sciences Adam Lonitser. The naturalist Carl Linnaeus discovered and named the plant. Although he originally planned to name the entire genus Caprifolium (honeycomb). This is due to the fact that in Europe in his time, the most common type of seating used was "honeycomb".
Variety Description
Forest honeysuckle is a small shrub with a grayish-brown bark. The covering of the branches looks like a washcloth.When the shoots age, the bark begins to flake off their surface in long, narrow strips.
The height of the bush is on average about 2.5 meters. Young sprouts from the trunk are usually slightly down, with a greenish or red bark (depending on the age of the branch). The leaves on them are not wide, oval in shape, with a clear edge. Their size is up to 7 centimeters long and about 5 centimeters wide. From above they are dark green, matte, and from below they are grayish-green in color with thick villi. On the sheet, as a rule, a central vein of purple is visible. Often the leaves located at the ends of the branches grow together, forming a wide plate with two tips, in the middle of which the branch itself passes.
The flowers of the bush are bisexual, collected in several pieces next to each other at the ends of the branches. There are white, yellow, pink and blue colors. A tubular corolla of slightly irregular structure is often visible from a small flower, divided at the end into five parts. Due to the fact that these parts grow together in two or three pieces, it turns out to be a kind of “two-lipped” look. The flowers of the bushes are quite frost-resistant, withstand temperatures down to -7 ° C.
This species begins to bloom early, around the 15th of May. The berries of "common" honeysuckle usually ripen at the end of July. The bush begins fruiting for 3-4 years of its life. The yield from each plant can be up to 5 kg. Berries are usually arranged in pairs at the ends of branches. Their color is various shades of dark red and brown with a glossy sheen.
Plant use, benefits and harms
Honeysuckle, of course, has not received culinary use. Its berries, not only have a bitter taste, but also contain toxic substances for the human body.Although, to be more precise, the fruits of the shrub in small doses are consumed raw to treat certain diseases. Nowadays, the main use of the honeysuckle shrub is landscaping and the preparation of various traditional and classical medicines. For decorative purposes, the shrub is used, as it is well and conveniently trimmed, and also keeps its shape for a long time. The branches of bushes, due to their good density, are used in the manufacture of various wicker furniture.
As for medical use, then all parts of the plant are used, from branches to fruits. This type of shrub, due to the fact that it has beneficial properties for human health, can help with the following diseases:
- genitourinary system;
- edema;
- violations of the liver;
- nervous system;
- with asthma and diseases of the respiratory organs;
- associated with the gallbladder;
- disorders in the work of the gastrointestinal tract;
- various skin diseases, including eczema.
It can be used as an emetic and laxative. The plant has a strong bactericidal and analgesic effect. Accelerates honeysuckle and regeneration of body tissues. It is used not only in folk medicine, but is also included in many pharmaceutical preparations as a main or additional component.
Planting, care and breeding
You can plant honeysuckle bushes at any time of the year. But, as for many plants, the end of the autumn season is considered the best time for planting. This should be done no later than a month before the onset of real cold weather, depending on the current climate zone.
Choose a place to land well lit and protected from strong air currents. Bushes do not grow well in the shade.Honeysuckle loves soil that is not too acidic, so if there is such a problem at the planting site, then it is worth adding lime to the soil. It is desirable that the soil is not too dry, but at the same time does not contain excess moisture. Also undesirable for shrubs are places in which water stagnates for a long time after precipitation (lowlands, logs, channels of dried up rivers, and the like).
In order for moisture to be properly preserved, soil mulching is used. Mulch in the future will serve as an additional top dressing for the plant.
Honeysuckle can be bred in different ways: cuttings, both green and already lignified, branch branches from a nearby plant, seeds.
For all landing methods, it is first necessary to prepare a seat. It must be taken into account that this is a perennial bush and it will grow in its place for up to 30 years. Accordingly, it is necessary to provide him with good initial nutrition at the landing site. To do this, up to 15 kg of rotted compost, 200 grams of potassium salt and the same amount of double superphosphate are brought into the planting pit. The latter can be replaced with other fertilizers, such as Ammophos or Nitrofos. It is necessary to pour them 300-350 grams under a bush.
If fertilizers that do not contain potassium are used, then to increase its amount in the soil, it is necessary to add 500 g of wood ash per plant.
seed method
Before planting, the seeds are kept warm for a couple of months to accelerate their subsequent germination. You can store the seeds for no more than 3 years, then they greatly lose their germination capacity. In the first three years, germination is about 60%. Breeding seedlings of the honeysuckle shrub is no different from breeding any other shrub.If we consider in more detail, then first the seed is germinated, planted in pots. As soon as the plant grows up, it is transplanted into a greenhouse. In the second year after planting, you can transfer the plant to a permanent habitat.
Landing with woody cuttings
For her, year-old shoots are used. They are planted in prepared land either in late autumn or early spring, when the snow melts. Cut planting material at the end of autumn. If the cuttings are stored until spring, then they are tied in a bundle and dug in the sand. Landing is carried out in the landing pit, cutting the bottom. After they fall asleep with soil and shed abundantly.
Planting green cuttings
Material for planting is taken from the young shoots of the plant. It is necessary to pay attention that there are at least 2 nodes on the branch. It should be planted in a planting hole, immersing a cutting in it by a third and sprinkling soil on top. Be sure to moisten the soil well after planting.
Reproduction by layering
The middle of a long green branch is immersed in the prepared place. It is fixed with a wooden or iron bracket. After the place is sprinkled with soil. When the branch grows, the shoot is cut off from the mother plant with a shovel and transplanted to a permanent place.
Bushes do not require special care. It is advisable to feed the plant with mineral and organic substances every year. To do this, the soil under the bush is loosened and fertilized. Outside the outer outline of the plant, the soil is dug up completely, trying not to damage the root system. After each feeding, the dug-up area is covered with mulch.
It is possible to fertilize not only on the surface, but also directly to the honeysuckle root system.To do this, starting from the age of three, plants make deep narrow holes close to the bush, into which fertilizer solutions are poured.
It must be remembered that if the bush is young and low, then 4 holes are made around a depth of approximately 35 cm, and if it is already fruitful, then they are made about 6 pieces with a depth of half a meter. A crowbar is used to make punching holes easier.
As for the fertilizer itself, you can use both factory mixes and prepare your own organic top dressing. You can dilute mullein 1 to 6 or bird droppings 1 to 10. Under a young plant, you need to add 5 liters of solution, under a fruit-bearing plant - at least 10 liters.
Honeysuckle grows rather slowly, increasing in the first year by no more than 7 cm, in the second year by no more than 35 cm, and in the third year it grows to 50 cm. In connection with the pruning of the wolfberry, it is done approximately a year later in young seedlings, shortening them to 7-8 cm, thereby stimulating the growth of shoots. After a couple of years, it is necessary to thin out the bush, which will enhance subsequent fruiting.
When the crown is filled with old branches, they are cut to a stump. Subsequently, new strong shoots will go. There will be several of them. It is necessary to cut everything, leaving one for replacement in place of each old branch. It must be remembered that for good fruiting, a normal adult bush should have no more than 15 branches of different ages. Based on this, the excess is cut off.
This takes into account that it is impossible to thicken the outer zone of the plant too much and strongly expose the bush near the middle.
Reviews
Judging by the description given to the breeding of “common” honeysuckle, this plant takes root perfectly, practically does not get sick and does not require any special attention.The only thing you need to do with it is to prune and feed once a year.
As for the practical use, this is the decorative filling of the site, the yard, and the use for medical purposes. In addition, there is another use of honeysuckle, which was not mentioned above: if the owners have an apiary, then the bees are very fond of these bushes during the flowering period. Accordingly, they give more honey.
For the best varieties of honeysuckle, see the following video.