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Brilliance, by the bough

THE CALIFORNIA GARDEN

California native bushes and trees offer bird-attracting clusters of berries in a spectrum of colors, and without the prickles of English holly. Toyon, with its tiny, scarlet fruit, is a holiday favorite.

December 22, 2005|Lili Singer | Special to The Times

IT'S all gardener and dedicated birder Ken Gilliland can do to whisper with restraint. "Early this morning, I counted 75 quail," he says excitedly. "Look, there's one now on that log."

Quail Hollow, as Gilliland and wife Rhonda have dubbed their rustic Tujunga garden, pulsates from dawn to dusk with the noise and flurry of birds -- wild birds drawn to high limbs for nest building, an artificial spring and small waterfall cascading down a slope, and, perhaps most important, dense shrubs that provide a seemingly perpetual supply of food in the form of berries.

English holly -- that prickly bush with the classic red fruit -- is an icon of Christmastime, but not at the Gillilands'. As volunteer webmasters for the Theodore Payne Foundation for Wildflowers & Native Plants in Sun Valley (www.theodorepayne.org), where they have an inside scoop on which plants do best in cultivation, the couple designed their landscape with an emphasis on California natives.

For them, attracting birds with colorful berries means thinking beyond English holly.

Come winter, the toyon (Heteromeles arbutifolia, a chaparral native also known as California holly) sports Ferrari-red berries that put traditional Christmas holly to shame.

Toyon fruit are massed at the branch tips, where birds can easily spot and reach them. The berries hold well on the bush and prove resilient when cut for holiday decor. And unlike traditional holly (Ilex), toyon's foliage is prickle-free.

California holly is just one of many easy-to-grow natives that produce bird-tempting fruit in a spectrum of colors and throughout the four seasons.

As the last winy toyon berries are devoured -- yes, birds do get tipsy on the fermented fruit -- a tasty rainbow of native currants and shiny bronze manzanitas (literally "little apples") start to glow.

Birds depend on these staples from midwinter through spring. The summer fruit plate includes purple grapes, blue barberries and yellow honeysuckle.

Ghostly snowberries, orangy rose hips and scarlet madrone are ready to eat in autumn and early winter.

Though flowering and subsequent fruiting times vary in response to temperature, elevation and water, the sequence is quite dependable.

"Berries add so much to every season," says Jeff Bohn, co-owner of Tree of Life Nursery in San Juan Capistrano. "They change the whole look of the plant."

"Coffeeberry (Rhamnus californica) is very plain until the berries come on. You can barely see the flowers, but the fruit smell and look just like coffee beans, and change colors as they slowly dry on the plant."

Bohn adds that fleshy berries -- currants, elderberries, grapes -- drop quickly, if the birds don't get to them first. But woodier fruit, such as manzanita and mission manzanita, Xylococcus bicolor, hold for a long time.

Regardless of berry type, says Ken Gilliland, the result is the same: "Plant natives and birds will come. When we moved in, we counted 40 different bird species on the property.

Since adding the natives, the list has grown to 80 -- an extraordinary number for a site with no natural water source."

Most songbirds and all members of the thrush family love berries, he says. Thrashers, jays and robins eat the "arctos" (\o7Arctostaphylos\f7, common name manzanitas). All the birds seem to love elderberries (\o7Sambucus\f7) and gooseberries and currants (\o7Ribes\f7).

"Snowberries taste like chalk and are the berry of last resort, eaten when everything else is gone, which is nice because I think they're most beautiful," Gilliland adds.

Yes, gardeners too have preferences.

Barbara Eisenstein, horticultural outreach coordinator at Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden in Claremont, is fond of \o7Mahonia \f7 'Golden Abundance,' a hybrid barberry with "spectacular spring flowers, blue summer berries, glossy green leaves, coppery new growth and great fall color. And, though evergreen, the old foliage turns bright red before it drops."

Dense, thorny thickets of \o7Mahonia, Ribes\f7 and wild rose also provide necessary cover for small birds and protection from hawks and other raptors.

Eisenstein recommends coffeeberry as an alternative to ubiquitous Indian hawthorn (\o7Rhaphiolepis indica\f7), and she says summer holly, \o7Comarostaphylis diversifolia\f7, is underappreciated.

"It looks similar to toyon but does everything at the opposite time of year.

"The fruit of \o7Vitis californica\f7 'Roger's Red,' a California grape with exquisite red fall foliage, was really delicious this year," she says. "Golden currants (\o7Ribes aureum\f7) are delicious in pancakes. And they're so pretty as they ripen, becoming more and more golden with little hints of red, just like the flowers."

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