- Container Grown
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- Colorado Blue Spruce
Colorado Blue Spruce
- Features unique silvery blue-green color year-round
- Known as a very adaptable evergreen
- Is deer-resistant, seldom experiencing severe damage
- Provides privacy and a windbreak when planted in a row
Note: They measure the tree from the trunk up. This does not include the container.
Colorado Blue Spruce
- Features unique silvery blue-green color year-round
- Known as a very adaptable evergreen
- Is deer-resistant, seldom experiencing severe damage
- Provides privacy and a windbreak when planted in a row
Note: They measure the tree from the trunk up. This does not include the container.
Autumn Blaze Maple
Searching for a classic fall tree with an incredible color payoff? Look no further than the Autumn Blaze maple, known for its bright scarlet foliage that turns late in the season. This popular variety has won back-to-back awards for “Urban Tree of the Year” and is also a fast grower, averaging two feet per year.
- Displays brilliant orange and scarlet foliage in late fall
- Hardiness Zone 3-8
Dark Red Maple
Dark Red Maples will give you beautiful color anywhere. These trees will give you long-lasting color, shifting from a deep purple to a deep green and back to a brilliant purple in fall, hassle-free. Plus, the Dark Red Maple will give you dense shade, blocking the hot sun from your home and yard. Grows well in hardiness zones 4-7.
Little Leaf Linden
- Size: Small to medium sized tree, typically reaching heights of 40-50 feet
- Foliage: Dark green, glossy leaves that are heart-shaped
- Flowers and fruit: Inconspicuous flowers in the spring, followed by small, drooping nutlets in the fall
- Growth habit: Upright and pyramidal when young, becoming more rounded and spreading with age
- Sunlight: Prefers full sun to partial shade
- Soil: Adaptable to a wide range of soils, but prefers moist, well-drained soil
- Hardiness: Cold hardy in USDA zones 4-8
- pH level: Tolerant of a wide range of pH levels
- Pruning: Minimal pruning is necessary, but can be done to shape or control the size of the tree
- Pest and diseases: Generally disease and pest-free, but can be susceptible to scale insects and cankers
Canada Red Chokecherry
The Canada Red Chokecherry is colorful and hardy. This native American chokecherry variety boasts green leaves in the spring that turn into a stunning dark purple in the mid-summer. The chokecherry fruits are considered poisonous when raw, but can be processed into jams and preserves.
- Produces small, reddish-purple edible fruits
- Displays red-brown bark and hanging clusters of white flowers that are each 3-5" in length
- Is hardy and can tolerate many harsh conditions
Golden Willow - 5 gallon only
Golden Willow will grow to be about 50 feet tall at maturity, with a spread of 40 feet. It has a low canopy with a typical clearance of 5 feet from the ground, and should not be planted underneath power lines. It grows at a fast rate, and under ideal conditions can be expected to live for 80 years or more.
This tree should only be grown in full sunlight. It is an amazingly adaptable plant, tolerating both dry conditions and even some standing water. It is not particular as to soil type or pH. It is highly tolerant of urban pollution and will even thrive in inner city environments. This is a selected variety of a species not originally from North America.
Austrian Pine - 5 gallon only
The Austrian pine has passed the test, just as it has for centuries in Europe. Since it was introduced to the U.S. in 1759, this pine has been planted as both a beautiful landscape tree — with its dense, dark green crown — and a working tree that restores strip mines and scarred land, stabilizes soil, and tames the wind.
- Withstands heat and drought
- Grows well in clay and alkaline soils
- Dense crown makes it ideal for windbreaks
Mugho Pine - 5 gallon only
This evergreen has become a favorite landscape plant throughout suburban America. Small in stature, the dwarf mugo pine is a slow grower with the ability to grow easily in so many places. Its dense branches and dark green needles make a nice choice for rock gardens and mass plantings.
- Provides dark green color year-round
- Can be used in a variety of landscape settings
- Grows as a shrub
Quaking Aspen
This fast-growing tree boasts the widest natural range of any tree in North America, spanning 47 degrees of latitude (equal to half the distance from the equator to the North Pole), 110 degrees of longitude (nine time zones) and elevations from sea level to timberline. It is not a tree for all places. But planted in the right location, the quaking aspen is a delight of color, movement, and sound.
- Provides stunning golden-yellow fall color
- Features striking, iconic white bark
- Grows very quickly
Quick Note: We are only selling singles. It is recommended from our nursery to buy multiple singles and plant together as they like to be in clump!
Cottonless Cottonwood
This is a very vigorous, fast growing tree with a broad, irregularly rounded canopy with coarse, spreading branches. Smooth, grayish-brown bark becomes deeply furrowed and darker with age. Rich green, wide, triangular-shaped leaves turn yellow in the fall. Needs a large open area to grow and develop properly. Hardy to -50°F Maximum Elevation: 7,000
Narrowleaf Cottonwood
Height: 50 to 60 feet tall
Spread: 35-45 feet
Shape: Columnar or conical shape. Slim in profile, can grow in tightly packed clusters. Leaves can cover the trees from bottom to top due to small limbs.
Exposure: Full sun
Leaves: Yellow-green to dark green, long and narrow, 1-2 inches long, with finely serrated edges (similar to willows, because they are in the willow family). Showy yellow leaves in the fall.
Fruit: Catkins in the early spring
Drought-tolerant? No
Bark: Rough and gray
Where to Plant: Suitable for sandy, loamy, and heavy soils. Prefers well-drained soil. Cannot grow in the shade. Root systems can damage building foundations by drying out the soil, so don’t plant within 40 feet of any buildings. Does not grow well in clay soils.
Apple Trees - 5 Gallon Only
Jonagold
Unique flavor makes the fruit luscious enough to serve by itself as dessert. This crisp super apple is a cross between the tart Jonathan and the sweet Golden Delicious. The result is a tasty treat for all! Originates from Geneva, New York in 1953. Ripens in mid-September. Pollinator required: Choose another apple variety.
HoneyCrisp
A modern apple in high demand. Outstanding fresh-eating qualities make this variety an American favorite. Fruit is aromatic and sweet as honey with an explosively juicy, crisp texture. Grow this naturally compact tree even in small spaces. Originates from Excelsior, Minnesota in 1974. Cold-hardy. Ripens in early September. Pollinator required: Choose another apple variety.
Jonathan
Perfect for pie! Compact-growing tree yields a bright red fruit with that classic Jonathan sweet-tart taste. Make flavorful pies, adds complexity to cider, and is a top choice for old-fashioned candied apples. Originates from Waverly, Missouri in 1963. Ripens in mid September. Self-pollinating.
McIntosh
McIntosh Apples are a large, bright red fruit with a sweet taste. The apples ripen in early fall and are perfect for eating fresh or for making cider to keep you warm through the coming winter. McIntosh Apple trees require 900 chill hours and are self-pollinators. They prefer full sun and moist, well-drained soil. At maturity, the McIntosh apple can reach a height and width of 15-20 feet.