Shrub

Heavenly Bamboo

Nandina domestica · Berberidaceae

Also called: Nandina, Sacred Bamboo

Heavenly Bamboo (Nandina domestica) is a moderate-water shrub well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun to partial shade, with a slow to moderate growth rate.

Heavenly Bamboo (Nandina domestica) growing in Tucson
Photo: KENPEI (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Heavenly Bamboo at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun to partial shade; in Tucson appreciates afternoon shade and protection from intense west-facing reflected heat, where foliage scorches and bleaches in full summer sun.
Mature size
Species 4-8 ft tall x 2-4 ft wide; dwarf cultivars ('Firepower', 'Gulf Stream', 'Compacta') stay 1-3 ft.
Growth rate
Slow to moderate
Bloom
White flowers; ornamental bright red berries, White flower panicles in late spring (May-June), followed by bright red berries in fall and winter.
Cold hardiness
Cold-hardy well below Tucson lows (to roughly 5-10°F); evergreen here, foliage turns red/bronze in cold weather. No frost protection needed in 9a/9b.
Soil
Adaptable to most soils including alkaline desert soil; prefers well-drained soil improved with organic matter and benefits from mulch.
Native range
China, Japan, India (eastern Asia); not a true bamboo
Best used as
Foundation planting, Informal hedge or screen, Accent/specimen, Container plant, Filtered-shade/courtyard plantings
Wildlife
Berries eaten by some birds but can be toxic in quantity; not a notable pollinator or desert-wildlife plant.
Toxicity
Toxic. All parts, especially the berries, contain cyanogenic compounds; berries can poison pets, livestock, and birds (notably fatal to cedar waxwings) and are harmful to children. Plant cautiously around pets and kids; sterile/dwarf fruitless cultivars reduce risk.

How to grow Heavenly Bamboo in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Water deeply and regularly to establish; once established, irrigate every 7-14 days in summer and every 2-3 weeks in winter, keeping the root zone moist but not soggy. It is not truly drought-tolerant in the low desert and shows stress (leaf curl, scorch) under-watered.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Light feeder; apply a balanced slow-release or all-purpose shrub fertilizer in spring (and optionally early fall). Tucson's alkaline soil can cause iron chlorosis (yellowing leaves with green veins) — correct with chelated iron and soil sulfur.

Pruning & care

Renewal-prune in late winter/early spring by cutting the oldest/tallest canes to the ground at staggered heights to keep growth full and avoid a leggy, bare-bottomed look; never shear into a formal ball.

Notes

Non-native and considered invasive in parts of the Southeast US, though not aggressively so in arid Tucson. A common low-desert landscape shrub for shadier, well-irrigated spots; choose dwarf cultivars for compact mass plantings. Watch for iron chlorosis in alkaline soil.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension / Pima County Master Gardeners; AMWUA Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert; Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum plant resources

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