Colutea arborescens, is in general cultivation in the UK. It was imported early, before 1568, probably for medicinal purposes, but now is grown mostly for its attractive
seed pods, used in dried arrangements. Though in Virginia
Thomas Jefferson had it and it appears in Lady Jean Skipwith's lists of plants, in US gardens, it is little more than a marginal curiosity.
Colutea arborescens will grow in poor sandy
soils in preference to heavy or
loamy soils. It has become naturalised in the UK, where it established itself in the sharp drainage of railway embankments. It is easy to propagate from seed. It is generally pest resistant, though garden
snails will climb up the plant in wet weather to eat the leaves. The
hybrid Colutea × media (
C. arborescens ×
C. orientalis) is also cultivated for its coppery flowers. == Uses ==