Position
Full sun, Part shade









Salix
VAT included · plus
Your outdoor plant has just been packed, transported and unpacked, so give it a calm start before planting or placing it permanently. Remove all packaging carefully, check the pot, stems, visible roots and substrate moisture, and settle any loose growing medium back around the root ball. Water if the root ball feels dry, but do not leave the pot standing in water. For the first few days, keep the plant in a sheltered spot suited to its light needs, away from strong midday sun, heavy wind, frost and heat stress.
Do not move the plant straight into full exposure, especially if it is young, newly flushed, evergreen, recently pruned or greenhouse-grown. Gradually introduce more sun, wind and temperature variation over several days. If cold nights, storms, intense sun or hot dry weather are expected, keep the plant protected until conditions are more stable. Do not fertilize immediately after delivery; let the plant settle first and resume feeding only when it is actively growing and conditions are suitable.
Outdoor plants may arrive in different seasonal stages. Depending on the time of year, your plant may be leafy, flowering, newly sprouting, recently pruned, dormant, partly bare or leafless. Adjust care to what the plant is doing: actively growing plants need closer moisture checks, while dormant plants usually need protection from extremes and only light moisture management until growth resumes.
Plant outdoors when the soil is workable and weather conditions suit the plant type. Avoid planting during frost, heatwaves, waterlogged soil or very dry windy periods. It is better to keep the plant protected in its pot for a short time than to plant into stressful conditions. After planting, water thoroughly so the root ball and surrounding soil connect properly, then monitor moisture while the plant establishes.
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Salix integra 'Flamingo' is grown for its young foliage, which emerges with a lively mix of pink, cream and green before becoming greener through summer. The plant is deciduous and usually sold either as a bushy shrub or as a small standard with a rounded head. It gives quick seasonal colour without relying on large flowers, and the light leaves can brighten entrances, patios and moist border corners from spring onward.
This is a willow, so its roots and leaves are happiest with steady moisture. The strongest colour comes from steady moisture that keeps healthy young shoots developing. Salix integra 'Flamingo' is especially useful when foliage colour is wanted on a shrub that stays manageable. The natural habit is bushy, and pruning can refresh the coloured growth while keeping the outline tidy.
Salix integra 'Flamingo' reaches about 150 to 250 cm high and wide in garden conditions, depending on whether it is grown as a shrub, a standard or a regularly trimmed container plant. The crown can be kept tighter with annual pruning, while open-ground shrubs can become broader with age. A single plant works well as a patio feature, beside a path, near a seating area or in a moist border with perennials at the base.
Containers keep Salix integra 'Flamingo' smaller and slower than open ground, but a potted willow still needs a generous root space. A small pot dries too quickly and weakens leaf quality. Choose a broad container with drainage holes and a moisture-retentive compost blend. A standard form in a pot also needs weight at the base so the stem stays steady in wind and new roots remain settled.
Salix integra 'Flamingo' grows in full sun or partial shade. Leaf colour is usually strongest in good light, while hot afternoon exposure can mark leaves during dry spells. Soil should be deep, moisture-retentive and well drained, with loam or clay-based soil often working well. Shallow chalky soil is less suitable because it can dry and stress the plant. Around ponds or damp border edges, give the plant room and access for pruning.
For pot-grown Salix integra 'Flamingo', water when the top 20 to 30% of the pot depth has dried. In summer, that may mean regular watering, especially for standards with leafy crowns. A spring mulch over the pot surface or border root zone helps conserve moisture. The plant should have steady water and drainage together; standing water in a closed container still deprives roots of air, even for a moisture-loving willow.
The best colour on Salix integra 'Flamingo' comes from fresh shoots, so pruning is part of normal care. In late winter or early spring, remove dead, damaged and crossing stems, then shorten older shoots to encourage new growth. Standard forms can be shaped by trimming the crown evenly. Shrub forms can be cut back more selectively to keep a natural outline while still renewing young shoots.
A light summer trim can neaten the plant after the first flush of growth. This is useful for container standards near doors or paths. Keep cuts clean and balanced, and leave enough leafy growth for the plant to recover quickly. Repeated hard clipping in dry conditions can stress the plant, so water well before and after summer shaping during warm spells.
Salix integra 'Flamingo' drops its leaves in autumn, revealing slender stems. That winter bareness is normal. Catkins may appear in spring, but foliage colour is the main feature. Leaf scorch, crisp margins or dull colour usually point to dry roots, harsh exposure or a pot that is too small for the crown. Weak new growth can also follow poor pruning or depleted container compost.
It performs best where the soil stays evenly moist and the aim is soft, fresh colour through the season. It is especially useful in large pots, moist mixed borders and garden entrances where one plant needs to look bright from spring into summer. With a sunny to lightly shaded site, deep soil, regular water and an annual pruning rhythm, Salix integra 'Flamingo' stays practical, leafy and easy to place.
Salix integra 'Flamingo' has a soft colour range, so it pairs well with plants that have darker green foliage, burgundy leaves or quiet grasses. In a large container, use it as the main vertical feature and keep underplanting simple so watering remains easy. In borders, it works near water features, damp corners, seating areas and entrance points where the spring colour can be noticed close up. The moving leaves and shifting colour give the plant a light, seasonal feel in mixed outdoor displays.
Standard forms need a little extra thought. The stem is permanent, while the crown is renewed by pruning, so the plant should be positioned where the rounded head has room to develop. A pot-grown standard can look formal, but the foliage itself is relaxed and airy. Shrub forms feel more natural in mixed borders and can be blended with moisture-loving perennials.
Salix integra 'Flamingo' is a good choice when there is enough moisture for steady growth and the aim is fresh, changing foliage colour. It gives quick seasonal impact and stays manageable when pruning and watering are part of the routine.
A young potted plant is easiest to manage when the pot size rises gradually as the root system fills out. This keeps watering steadier, supports fresh spring shoots and gives the rounded head enough root volume for clean seasonal colour.
Riverbanks, stream margins and damp ground in East Asia.
Compact deciduous shrub / small tree
Position
Full sun, Part shade
Moisture
Moist
Drainage
Moisture-retentive, Well-drained
Hardiness
Fully hardy · -15°C
Mature size
150–250 × 150–250 cm
Winter habit
Deciduous
Bloom time
Spring
Containers
Good in pots
Pruning
Late winter, Early spring