Saturday, May 19, 2012

Is Weigela the new catnip?






Species name: Weigela florida 'Alexandra'

Common name: Old Fashioned Weigela, Wine and Roses Weigela

Location: Ontario

This plant is native to Japan, and while not incredibly common it's not uncommon in its native habitat. During the winter this shrub is rather boring and...shrubby. The flowers usually appear first in April/May, with the leaves appearing relatively quickly after; green in the middle and maroon around the edges. The more the plant is pruned, the more it flowers the next year so the suggestion by gardening experts is to prune branches with flowers immediately after flowering ceases (so you know which branches had the flowers!).

No one has been able to explain to me why my cat is so very clearly attracted to these plants like a fish to water. I would even argue that if we had catnip planted in the back yard she would ignore it in favour of shoving her face into these flowers. She gets defiant when you try to pull her away from them, too, so there's obviously something pretty potent in the flowers that she smells that I don't. The flowers aren't overly scented, at least not by human standards. These shrubs are cultivated for their showy flowers and ornamental leaves, not flower smell.

Other than the obvious ornamental value this plant has, it has no other economic or medicinal value. To my knowledge, this plant isn't used in Traditional Chinese Medicine (many of the species in the genus Weigela are native to China) or by the ancient Japanese people as medicine or food.

3 comments:

  1. I was just looking for information about this online because I caught the neighbors cat rubbing all over the weigela, plucking petals from the flowers, etc and it would not leave! Very strange...

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  2. I'm glad to know it's not only my cat that seems to go nuts over it! I thought at first that another cat (or other animal) must have sprayed it and so she was picking up the other animal's scent. But since it's been 5 years now and every spring she does the same thing, it must be the plant itself!

    If you ever find an explanation for what's going on, drop me another line!

    Thanks for stopping by :)

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  3. Someone with a science degree should get on this because my cat LOVES the weigelia. He licks the flowers, rolls on it and under it, grabbing it in his paws, lost in some sort of cat reverie.

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