Granny's gone and done it again

A lot of these bushes are super loaded with berries this year.
I think it's a honeysuckle of sorts, (I also think they're considered invasive). The Robins and Cedar Waxwings love them!View attachment 3683362
We had something that looked just like that in TN. Birds thrived on them in the winter.
 
A lot of these bushes are super loaded with berries this year.
I think it's a honeysuckle of sorts, (I also think they're considered invasive). The Robins and Cedar Waxwings love them!View attachment 3683362
google sezs that looks like the buffalo berry.
 
Good day Twist, how are you today?

tired, but Happy.
nothing like trying to work around my , bother, Vicki's and Angie's OH and the vet and Gene ( in colorado) for the great yak delivery of 2023. I will be leaving the 24 of Nov, day after turkey day. Stopping at the vets for a health check and certification on yaks. Then heading down to Cheyenne , Wy to pick up my co-pilot for the rest of the trip down and back. Waiting to here from the Man who wanted the wooly and maybe a couple of this years bull calves.
 
A lot of these bushes are super loaded with berries this year.
I think it's a honeysuckle of sorts, (I also think they're considered invasive). The Robins and Cedar Waxwings love them!View attachment 3683362
Google Lens seemed to think it was some kind of viburnum. I asked if viburnum is a kind of honeysuckle and got this:

Linden viburnum was introduced in the early 1800s as an ornamental. It occurs in scattered locations throughout the mid-Atlantic region from New York to Virginia and has been reported to be invasive in natural areas in Virginia. It grows in disturbed forests and wetlands. Shrubs can grow over 15 ft.

But I did not get a yes or no answer to my question.
 
Aha. Then I found this:

There are so many reasons to love viburnum! A member of the honeysuckle family, this pretty flowering shrub is easy to grow in almost any zone, and it can be trained to grow as either a bush or a tree. There are over 150 hardy varieties, many of which are resistant to insects and disease.

(And yes, it's invasive!)
 

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