Trees for small gardens
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Boothy
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Trees for small gardens

by Boothy » Thu Mar 10, 2011 1:55 pm

Hi

Anyone know of a pretty tree for a small garden so the routs will not damage the house. I only want it to be max 8ft in height with say 5 ft spread. Soil and conditions are good.

Charles10
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by Charles10 » Fri Mar 18, 2011 9:31 am

Hi! i think the Strawberry's tree will be nice in your small garden :)

mikeb74
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by mikeb74 » Sun Jun 12, 2011 9:20 am

any other thoughts on this? we want an attractive tree for our small garden, does anyone know how big a magnolia will get? or anything similar that flowers for longer? thx

booshank
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Re: Trees for small gardens

by booshank » Thu Nov 10, 2011 12:18 am

Magnolias come in many varieties and range in size from quite small to large trees, so you need to be a bit careful of which one you get. Magnolia stellata is one of the smaller ones, it is also slow-growing.

123v
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Re: Trees for small gardens

by 123v » Tue Nov 15, 2011 3:56 pm

maybe some sort of fruit or veg plant

sammie
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Re: Trees for small gardens

by sammie » Mon Dec 19, 2011 9:07 am

Add spring flair to your landscape with crabapples. There's a wonderful array available that bears flowers in shades of white, pink, and red; has weeping, rounded, or columnar habits; and produces orange, gold, red, or burgundy fruits. Many varieties offer exceptional fall color and great disease resistance as well. It's just ranging from 6 to 30 feet tall and wide, depending on variety.

sammie
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Re: Trees for small gardens

by sammie » Mon Dec 19, 2011 9:09 am

There are many trees widely available for smaller gardens, in all shapes and sizes, evergreen and deciduous. Given that many of us have limited space in which to garden, it becomes important that any trees chosen are right for their surroundings, in terms of proportion as well as for their decorative value. You can also choose the Redbud. It is valued for its outstanding display of pink or white flowers in spring, redbud is an easy-to-grow small tree with delightful heart-shape leaves that turn golden-yellow in fall. It thrives in sun or partial shade and is native to areas of North America.

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