Jacksonville, FL (Zone 9a) | November 2015 | positive
I have grown this plant for a few years on the south side of a building in Jacksonville, Florida zone 9a. This location is protected from...Read More winter winds but the plant has experienced temperatures in the mid-20's F. I wouldn't say that it is reliably cold hardy throughout zone 9a but it may grow for many years in a protected site in the warmer parts of the zone.
I like this tree. The flowers are really cool but are hard to appreciate unless you are up close. It is a small tree and seems to be sh...Read Moreort lived, at least in our area, which is Broward County, Florida. If you have an area in your yard where you need a small tree, maybe next to a bench, this tree would be a tree that would start a conversation.
Boca Raton, FL (Zone 10a) | January 2005 | positive
Jamaican Capertree or Capertree or Caper (Capparis cynophallophora) is native to the tropical hardwood and coastal hammocks and coastal h...Read Moreabitats of central and southern Florida, the Keys, and through the Caribbean and West Indies. It is a great tree that thrives in sun or shade and provides food and shelter for wildlife. It is great for landscaping in central and southern Florida, where it is native, and the showy, near white to maroon-purple flowers are quite attractive. It grows in zones 9a through 11, the same zones as the other species of caper found in central and southern Florida that occurs in the same habitats (which is Capparis flexuosa AKA Limber or Bayleaf Caper). The Jamaican Capertree, like the Bayleaf or Limber Caper, has a small to medium hight usually. The leaves of this species are usually more glossy and shiny than those of the Bayleaf or Limber Caper. Also, the leaves of the Bayleaf Caper are usually smaller. The attractive and unusual fruits this species bears are bright red or red to red-pink. The fruits provide food for wildlife and the foilage provides shelter for birds and other wildlife. It should be encouraged for use in the central and southern Florida landscape, including for native plant or wildlife gardens! This species, like the Bayleaf Caper, is also found in the hammovks on the southern mainland of Florida in Everglades National Park (Miami-Dade and Monroe counties). This species, in Florida, is found in Brevard, Indian River, St. Lucie, Martin, Palm Beach, Broward, Miami-Dade, Monroe (mainland and the Keys), Collier, Lee, Charlotte, Sarasota, Manatee, Hillsborough, and Pinellas counties, in zones 9a through 11. The Bayleaf Caper, meanwhile, in Florida, is found in Volusia, Brevard, Indian River, St. Lucie, Martin, Palm Beach, Broward, Miami-Dade, Monroe (mainland and the Keys), Collier, and Lee counties. Both species are found in central and southern Florida and the Keys, into the Caribbean, in zones 9a through 11.
I have grown this plant for a few years on the south side of a building in Jacksonville, Florida zone 9a. This location is protected from...Read More
I like this tree. The flowers are really cool but are hard to appreciate unless you are up close. It is a small tree and seems to be sh...Read More
Jamaican Capertree or Capertree or Caper (Capparis cynophallophora) is native to the tropical hardwood and coastal hammocks and coastal h...Read More