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Otto: See the wahoo shrub in all its seasonal radiance

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Spindle tree, Euonymus europaeus, also planted ornamentally, is an invader in its own right. It, too, has fall color, but it pales in comparison to wahoo. As Dick Young wrote in Kane County Wild Plants & Natural Areas, “The leaves have a washed-out pink or yellowish cast in autumn and one has to wonder why this wimp is promoted instead of our much more attractive native Wahoo.”

Part of the reason may lie in the confusion created by people’s use of common names. All three species, plus their many cultivars, fall under the umbrella name “burning bush.” And burning bush is the sort of name that readily sticks in people’s minds. The words themselves produce a vivid mental image; also, if you’ve ever sat in Sunday school, the name might resonate as the place where Moses received his marching orders.

If you’d like to add wahoo, and not its Eurasian relatives, to your yard’s plantings, be sure to shop using the plant’s two-part scientific name. Don’t let the Latin intimidate you. Euonymus means “good name” and atropurpurea references the plant’s springtime purple flowers. All you have to do is remember that Euonymus atropurpurea is a good name for purple color, and fall colors too.

Want to see wahoo in all its seasonal radiance? Come visit us at the Hickory Knolls Discovery Center. You’ll find wahoo shrubs, labeled with both their common and scientific names, right outside the front door. In fact, we’re such wahoo fanatics, we’ve also paid tribute to the plant indoors. The Wahoo Room, labeled with a gorgeous hand-painted picture of its namesake, is Hickory Knolls’ home base for birthday parties and science and nature classes.

Whether indoors or out, give a shout of recognition – a big “Wahoo!” – when you spot E. atropurpurea. We’ll be listening for you!

• Pam Otto is the manager of nature programs and interpretive services for the St. Charles Park District. She can be reached at potto@st-charlesparks.org or 630-513-4346.

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