Ornamental Trees Catalog
Browse Ornamental Trees
An improved hybrid with brilliant, long lasting, orange-red fall color, an upright, uniform branching habit and a rapid growth rate. An excellent lawn, park or street tree. Deciduous. Autumn blaze
Grows in a more upright and pyramidal fashion. It is tolerant of urban sites then more common Red Maple cultivars and more refined than most Freeman Maple types. In spring it has attractive dark green leaves. Its fiery red fall color is a showstopper. Prefers acidic soil.
Fall Fiesta is a sugar maple noted for its increased vigor and growth rate compared to the straight species. Compact and sturdy when young and matures to a symmetrical, full-sized tree with thick, dark green foliage. It shines in autumn when its leaves turn a brilliant mix of red, orange, and yellow.
Medium-sized, deciduous ornamental trees. They have a pyramidal shape and spectacular fall color. Reddish-orange to bright red in fall. Longtime standard for sugar maple cultivars.
Heavy stems are covered with white blossoms in early spring, followed by dark green foliage. Leaves turn brilliant red in fall and remain on the tree for an extended period of time. Moderate, spreading branches combined with light-gray bark add interest to the landscape throughout the year. Medium grower; 10′ in 8 years.
A street tree Amelanchier. Pure white blooms smother a delicate latticework of twigs in spring. Green foliage turns orange-red fall color.
Light-pink spring flowers are followed by ever-changing display of colorful foliage that continues all the way to fall. New foliage emerges burgundy, fades to yellow, and matures to green.
A lovely compact redbud tree with a weeping canopy that is perfect for a smaller-sized landscape. An excellent specimen plant with clusters of lavender-red, sweet pea-like blooms in spring. Small, semi-glossy, heart-shaped leaves turn yellow in fall.
Blooms are reddish-purple to rosy-pink in spring. Regular watering and fertilization is very important–especially until it is established. Flowers appear on bare branches bridging the gap between winter and spring. Medium grower, 7-10′ in 5-6 years.
A beautiful, easy to grow small tree which simply can’t be matched for year round beauty. In spring, leaves emerge sporting deep veins that make the plant stand out in the landscape. In August it beomes covered with big clusters of fragrant white flowers.
Bushy deciduous shrub that can be trained as a tree as well. Noted for its elegant, pristine white, large, double flowers, up to 4″ across, adorned with 5 large outer petals surrounding a center of small, peltaloid stamens. Blooming continuously from late summer to fall, each flower lasts about one day and stands out against the green foliage. Deer resistant.
It showcases white, cone-shaped blooms that emerge about a month earlier than other Hydrangeas and will literally cover the plant with 8-12″ blooms in lat May or early June. The real show begins as these blooms change color to a fine, dark pink and serve as a second season of bloom for the rest of the summer.
Foliage habit is upright in early summer changing to cascading as summer progresses due to added weight from the flower panicles. Blooms on new growth from mid-summer to fall. Flowers open white, change to pink and finally mature to pinkish-red, with multicolor flowering occuring in late summer as new flowering stmes emerge to join mature flowers.
A tree form and similar to the style and look of ‘Limelight’ Hydrangea. It has fresh, lime green flowers that create a summertime bloom extravaganza. These flowers will change to white and then age to a nice pink into fall. These fall blooms work well in dried flower arrangements. Flowers on new wood.
Lime green flowers emerge in July and age to white and continue to evolve to pink and burguindy colors by fall and remain. Panicles grow on new wood, so prune back in early spring only.
Spring blooming features large, leathery green leaves and fragrant purple-red blossoms. The foliage turns golden-yellow in fall.
One of the earliest and finest yellow-flowered magnolias. Upright, pyramidal. Masses of tulip-shaped, rich canary yellow flowers 4-5″ appear in mid-spring before the new leaves.
Small, deciduous tree adorned with a profusion of dark pink flowers in mid-spring. Opening from deep red-purple buds, the slightly fragrant, large flowers, 8″ across, light pinkish-purple outside, paler rose within. Grows in a narrow, conical habit
Double, 3″ white fragrant flowers bloom in spring. Try to avoid southern exposures since the buds will tend to open fastest in this location. Cold weather could cause the blooms to freeze. Good specimen or accent plant against a brick wall. Slow growing, 3-6′ over 5-6 year period.
An upright-spreading , disease-resistant, easy-to-grow, crabapple tree that features deeply lobed purple foliage which retains excellent color throughout summer. Magenta-pink single flowers in spring develop into tiny maroon-red crabapples that mature in late summer and excellent orange-red fall color.
Pink buds opening to white flowers smother the dense, rounded head of this top-grafted, compact dwarf. Summer foliage is espically clean and bright green. An abundant fruit crop persists well into winter, slowly turning from golden yellow to orange.
Elegant, arching branches are a flurry of sweet pink flowers in early spring, standing out against the silvery branches. Dark green foliage turns into a red/orange tones in fall.
Naturally weeping branches are covered with showy, snow white flowers on this compact, hardy tree for the landscape. Produces very few red-black ornamental fruits in summer. Very disease and insect resistant. Beautiful small tree!