By Richard Bloom

Published: Thursday, 01 September 2022 at 12:00 am


In old gardening books you will find cotinus referred to as Rhus cotinus; in fact the species Cotinus coggygria is sometimes called Venetian sumac, endorsing its association with the genus. Now separated from rhus, cotinus stands alone as the genus of a handful of species, the cultivars of which include some of our finest foliage shrubs.

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© Jason Ingram

To most gardeners, cotinus is synonymous with purple foliage, the plum-leaved forms being the most widely planted. The green-leaved smoke bush options are equally impressive, however, their soft leaves contrasting in colour and texture with evergreens and plants with typically formed foliage. Many of these excel when it comes to autumn colour.

They are large, hardy, summer-flowering, deciduous shrubs with attractive, rounded green, purple or gold leaves and feathery flower plumes. Its common name of smoke bush or smoke tree is inspired by the wispy character of its flowers.

There are three species from Europe and Asia, southeast USA and southwest China and the smaller cultivars grow to 1.2m in height and spread, while larger ones can reach 4-8m in height and spread. See below for the best cotinus to grow.

Season the abundant summer foliage often colours brilliantly in autumn. The fine, feathery, flower plumes remain attractive for many weeks from midsummer through to autumn.

Conditions Full sun or partial shade on any well-drained soil. Reasonably tolerant of exposed sites.

Hardiness Most are hardy throughout the UK even in cold winters and have an RHS hardiness rating of H5 (hardy to -15ºC). They’re suitable for gardens in USDA zones 4a-8b.

 

Best smoke bush trees for autumn colour

Cotinus coggygria ‘Royal Purple’

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© Richard Bloom

This cotinus is a large, bushy shrub with abundant, rounded, deep-purple leaves  turning rich red in autumn. The flower plumes are  purple-pink, tipped with creamy yellow at their peak. A superb background shrub.

AGM. 5m x 5m. RHS H5, USDA 4a-8b.