Serviceberry

Great Gardening Tips trees  


Serviceberry

This deciduous tree/shrub is multistemmed and gets up to 20 ft tall with a dense, bushy spread up to 10 ft across. It is an excellent small yard tree. Their beautiful, but brief, early spring flowering beats all but the earliest shrubs, and their fall foliage is first rate. Serviceberry trees have leaves that are 2 inches long and have a very pretty white fuzzy coat when young, but becoming shiny green as they mature. The flowers are white and borne in erect clusters in early spring as the leaves are unfolding. The little serviceberry shrubs are useful in naturalized plantings, especially in open woodlands, under tall oaks or pines. Ths fall color is brilliant yellow, red or orange. The Serviceberry tree, Amelanchier canadensis, may also be known as a Juneberry, Shadblow, or Shadbush. The bush sends up numerous suckers and can become quite a thicket. This large shrub has erect stems that form multi-stemmed clumps The serviceberries, genus Amelanchier, are deciduous shrubs or small trees that grow in the understory of temperate forests. The berrylike fruits are showy and edible. ... details

 

Autumn Gold Ginkgo The Autumn Gold Ginkgo, 'Ginkgo biloba "Autumn Gold", is a male cultivar (which are "fruitless"). 'Autumn Gold' is an all-male cultivar typically growing at maturity to 40-50' with a symmetrical, broadly spreading habit. This tree can have a lifespan as long as 1,000 years. Ginkgo are not native to North America, rather they are indigenous to China, Japan, and Korea, where they may still exist in remote mountainous parts. The Autumn gold is grown in average, medium wet soil in full sun. They prefer moist, sandy, well-drained soils. It is tolerant of a wide range of soil conditions, including both alkaline and acidic soils and compacted soils. Also tolerant of saline conditions, air pollution and heat. No smelly fruits with this Gingko cultivar.

Serviceberry
Tips