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It looks like a Raphiolepis shrub, because that is what "hawthorne bush" really is. It makes no sense for it to ever have been called that, there is no resemblance in leaf, flower, or fruit. There are two species of Raphiolepis found in nurseries, a small dense ball form R. indica, and a taller rangey shrub that is difficult to fit into a landscape design unless you accept that it will get quite large and rather formless. Both are evergreen, both have clusters of tiny flowers in spring, neither is really a substitute for Azaleas as commonly proposed.

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17y ago

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