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Arnold Promise Witch Hazel

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Arnold Promise Witch Hazel

A Shrub That Blooms When Nothing Else Does

There is a particular kind of gardening satisfaction that comes from walking outside on a grey February morning and finding flowers. Arnold Promise Witch Hazel (Hamamelis x intermedia 'Arnold Promise') delivers exactly that, producing sweetly fragrant, bright yellow blooms along bare branches in late winter while the rest of the landscape is still dormant. This is not a subtle plant. The ribbon-like, crinkled petals emerge from reddish-green calyx cups in airy clusters, catching the low winter sun and releasing a honey-sweet fragrance that carries well beyond the shrub itself.

'Arnold Promise' was introduced by the Arnold Arboretum in Boston in 1963, the result of a natural cross between Hamamelis mollis and Hamamelis japonica that William Judd first noticed in 1928. It is considered one of the finest of the hybrid witch hazels, recognized with the Royal Horticultural Society's prestigious Award of Garden Merit. The later bloom time compared to other x intermedia cultivars means its flowers are less likely to be caught by a hard freeze, and on cold days the petals curl protectively inward and reopen when temperatures rise, making the blooms remarkably resilient.

Three Seasons of Interest

The show does not end when the flowers fade. As spring arrives, broad oval leaves in bright green unfurl along the gracefully ascending branches, filling out the plant's distinctive open, vase-shaped silhouette. Through summer it serves as an attractive large-scale shrub or specimen, providing a handsome green backdrop in the border. Come fall, the foliage transitions into warm shades of yellow and orange before dropping, giving you one final burst of seasonal color before the cycle begins again with winter bloom.

Landscape Uses

At 12 to 15 feet tall and wide, Arnold Promise is a substantial shrub that makes an outstanding specimen in a lawn or at the corner of a home foundation. It works beautifully as a backdrop in a mixed shrub border, particularly alongside evergreens that will frame those pale yellow winter blooms. It is also a natural fit for woodland garden settings where its preference for organically rich, slightly acidic soil matches the conditions around oaks and native understory plants. Because it blooms before most pollinators are active, it is an especially important early nectar source for overwintering bees on warm late-winter days.

Why Arnold Promise Belongs in Your Garden

If your landscape goes quiet from November through March, Arnold Promise is the single shrub that changes that. It requires very little from you in terms of pruning, fertilizing, or pest management, and in return it delivers color, fragrance, and structure across three full seasons. Few landscape shrubs can make that claim.

$102.40
Arnold Promise Witch Hazel
$102.40

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Description

A Shrub That Blooms When Nothing Else Does

There is a particular kind of gardening satisfaction that comes from walking outside on a grey February morning and finding flowers. Arnold Promise Witch Hazel (Hamamelis x intermedia 'Arnold Promise') delivers exactly that, producing sweetly fragrant, bright yellow blooms along bare branches in late winter while the rest of the landscape is still dormant. This is not a subtle plant. The ribbon-like, crinkled petals emerge from reddish-green calyx cups in airy clusters, catching the low winter sun and releasing a honey-sweet fragrance that carries well beyond the shrub itself.

'Arnold Promise' was introduced by the Arnold Arboretum in Boston in 1963, the result of a natural cross between Hamamelis mollis and Hamamelis japonica that William Judd first noticed in 1928. It is considered one of the finest of the hybrid witch hazels, recognized with the Royal Horticultural Society's prestigious Award of Garden Merit. The later bloom time compared to other x intermedia cultivars means its flowers are less likely to be caught by a hard freeze, and on cold days the petals curl protectively inward and reopen when temperatures rise, making the blooms remarkably resilient.

Three Seasons of Interest

The show does not end when the flowers fade. As spring arrives, broad oval leaves in bright green unfurl along the gracefully ascending branches, filling out the plant's distinctive open, vase-shaped silhouette. Through summer it serves as an attractive large-scale shrub or specimen, providing a handsome green backdrop in the border. Come fall, the foliage transitions into warm shades of yellow and orange before dropping, giving you one final burst of seasonal color before the cycle begins again with winter bloom.

Landscape Uses

At 12 to 15 feet tall and wide, Arnold Promise is a substantial shrub that makes an outstanding specimen in a lawn or at the corner of a home foundation. It works beautifully as a backdrop in a mixed shrub border, particularly alongside evergreens that will frame those pale yellow winter blooms. It is also a natural fit for woodland garden settings where its preference for organically rich, slightly acidic soil matches the conditions around oaks and native understory plants. Because it blooms before most pollinators are active, it is an especially important early nectar source for overwintering bees on warm late-winter days.

Why Arnold Promise Belongs in Your Garden

If your landscape goes quiet from November through March, Arnold Promise is the single shrub that changes that. It requires very little from you in terms of pruning, fertilizing, or pest management, and in return it delivers color, fragrance, and structure across three full seasons. Few landscape shrubs can make that claim.