Hamamelis mollis, also known as Chinese witch hazel, is a species of flowering plant in the witch hazel family Hamamelidaceae, native to central and eastern China, in Anhui, Guangxi, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, Sichuan, and Zhejiang.
It is a deciduous large shrub or small tree growing to tall. The leaf are oval, long and broad, oblique at the base, acute or rounded at the apex, with a wavy-toothed or shallowly lobed margin, and a short petiole 6–10 mm long; they are dark green and thinly hairy above, and grey beneath with dense grey hairs. The Latin term means "soft", and refers to the felted leaves, which turn yellow in autumn. The are yellow, often with a red base, with four ribbon-shaped long and four short stamens, and grow in clusters; flowering is in late winter to early spring on the bare branches. The fruit is a hard woody capsule long, which splits explosively at the apex at maturity one year after pollination, ejecting the two shiny black from the parent plant.[
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Cultivation and uses
H. mollis is widely grown as an ornamental plant, valued for the strongly-scented flowers appearing in winter when little else is growing. Numerous have been selected, for variation in flower colour and size, and in shrub size and habit.[Huxley, A., ed. (1992). New RHS Dictionary of Gardening. Macmillan .] It is also one of the two parents of the popular garden hybrid plant H. × intermedia (the other parent is H. japonica).
The cultivars 'Jermyns Gold' and 'Wisley Supreme' have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.
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