
Enjoy Critter-Resistant, Early-Blooming, Shade-Loving Hellebore
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The Christmas Rose
The Christmas rose (H. niger) will bloom from December through March. Snow may cover them up, but the flower buds and blooms will still be there when the snow melts! Their evergreen leaves look a little ratty after a long winter, but they are soon replaced with fresh new ones.
Their five-petaled, ivory-white blossoms are about 3 inches across and resemble large, single roses.
A well-established Christmas rose will stand about 12 to 15 inches tall and bear 20 stems of flowers. Some blossoms turn pink as they age, but mine mature to a yellow shade.
The Lenten Rose
The Lenten rose (H. orientalis) blooms in April in my northern garden, so in most years, it technically blossoms during at least part of Lent. It is a little larger than the Christmas rose, standing about 24 inches tall, and produces up to 30 stems, each topped with two or three nodding blossoms. The flowers are about 3 inches across, but since they readily cross with other species of hellebores, they come in a wide array of interesting colors from white to pink, maroon, lilac, and deep purple.

Many of the Lenten Rose’s blossoms have freckles, blushes of contrasting colors, or even stripes, and there are single and double forms. Let your plant go to seed, and in a few years, you will be able to harvest the hybrid seedlings that come up underneath the plant’s protective leaves.
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Hellibores like alkaline soil, don't plant them with Azaleas and Rhododendrons (they like acid soil). Clematis or Holly would like the same neutral to alkaline soil. Most shade plants like acid soil.