Pussy Willow Salix discolor Willow family Salicaceae. Description: This shrub is about ' tall, forming single or multiple trunks. Most branches are erect to ascending and little-branched. An older shrub forms a gray-brown bark near the base that is slightly rough and fissured, while the bark of upper branches and twigs is reddish brown to brown and smooth. Actively growing stems are yellowish green to light green and either smooth, slightly pubescent, or densely pubescent rarely the latter.

12 Common Species of Willow Trees and Shrubs



12 Common Species of Willow Trees and Shrubs
JavaScript seems to be disabled in your browser. For the best experience on our site, be sure to turn on Javascript in your browser. If you love spring, you need a Pussy Willow Salix discolor in your landscape. You'll love it for those cute, velvety willow catkins that grow on every branch before the leaves emerge. If you've ever held a cat's paw and felt the cushy pads on their paws, you'll understand how this ornamental shrub got its name. The Pussy Willow season starts before some plants even think about breaking winter dormancy. You won't be able to resist touching the soft pads or cutting a few branches to bring indoors.



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Pussy willow
Willows include more than trees and shrubs from the Salix genus—a group of moisture-loving plants that are native to temperate and cold regions in the Northern Hemisphere. Depending on the species, willows range in size from low-ground-hugging shrubs to towering giants of 90 feet or more. All willows are moisture-loving plants that will do well in wet, boggy conditions, and some are adaptable enough to also do well in dry soils. The wood of willow trees tends to be brittle, so ornamental landscape use is limited to a relatively few species. In landscapes, willows are often planted alongside streams where the interlacing roots will hold back soil and prevent erosion.



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