Kwanzan Cherry Tree
Kwanzan Cherry Tree

Beautiful double rose-shaped pink flowers burst into show-stopping bloom in spring. Young, bronze-tinted leaves mature to green in summer, turning orange-bronze in autumn. Smooth satin bark and hardy stems. Display improves with each passing year. Mid-sized tree with rounded shape that does well in full sun. Makes a breathtaking garden feature or row. No fruit.

Yoshino Cherry Tree
Yoshino Cherry Tree

Magnificent small white flowers appear before the leaves emerge in spring. Tiny Yoshino berries are edible, but only birds and small animals enjoy consuming them. Beautiful satin bark with delicate branching pattern. Display improves with each passing year. Makes a breathtaking specimen. Beautiful as an entrance feature.

Hawthorn
Hawthorn

Russian Hawthorn features gorgeous white flowers in spring and outstanding autumn color. A fine choice for the landscape with excellent flower, fruit, and foliage! Hawthorns' decorative clusters of small berries are beautiful for winter interest and a favorite of wildlife, but not tolerable to the human stomach. Available in both tree and hedging forms. Provides instant dappled shade and structure to the landscape.

Aspen
Aspen

The Quaking Aspen is a delight of color, movement and sound. If there were a Guinness Book of World Records for trees, the Quaking Aspen would be in it. First, it has 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 ranging from sea level to timberline. It is also the largest living organism, growing in clones that reproduce primarily by sending up sprouts from an extensive connected root system. And as far as the oldest…a clone in Minnesota has been estimated to be thousands of years old! It is not a tree for all places, but planted in the right location, it’s beauty is exponential.

Typically grows from 20-80 feet tall with a trunk the diameter of 3-18” inches.