View Full Version : Suggestions for backyard trees
nomamasboy@hotmail.com
25-05-2006, 02:50 PM
I wanted to know if anyone could suggest a few types of flowering
trees, medium growth rate, zones 5-6 that reach a maximum height of no
more than 15-20 feet. I'm partial to the Japanese Cherry Blossom
because of its looks (and no fruit), but I think it will be too big for
my backyard. I've got a huge maple that has tangled itself around the
power lines and will eventually need to be cut down so I'm thinking a
few smaller, flowering trees hopefully with no fruit that have a nice
fragrance would be great back there.
Thanks for the ideas-
Tim
William Wagner
25-05-2006, 03:25 PM
In article om>,
" > wrote:
> I wanted to know if anyone could suggest a few types of flowering
> trees, medium growth rate, zones 5-6 that reach a maximum height of no
> more than 15-20 feet. I'm partial to the Japanese Cherry Blossom
> because of its looks (and no fruit), but I think it will be too big for
> my backyard. I've got a huge maple that has tangled itself around the
> power lines and will eventually need to be cut down so I'm thinking a
> few smaller, flowering trees hopefully with no fruit that have a nice
> fragrance would be great back there.
>
> Thanks for the ideas-
> Tim
Consider Stewardia, Franklinia or a flowering crabapple the double
flower type unless you want fruit. Kousa dogwoods are another
wonderful option.
Have fun !
Bill
--
S Jersey USA Zone 5 Shade
This article is posted under fair use rules in accordance with
Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, and is strictly for the educational
and informative purposes. This material is distributed without profit.
dr-solo@wi.rr.xx.com
26-05-2006, 03:37 PM
cornus kousa http://weloveteaching.com/landscape/kousa/kousa.html
" > wrote:
>I wanted to know if anyone could suggest a few types of flowering
>trees, medium growth rate, zones 5-6 that reach a maximum height of no
>more than 15-20 feet. I'm partial to the Japanese Cherry Blossom
>because of its looks (and no fruit), but I think it will be too big for
>my backyard. I've got a huge maple that has tangled itself around the
>power lines and will eventually need to be cut down so I'm thinking a
>few smaller, flowering trees hopefully with no fruit that have a nice
>fragrance would be great back there.
>
>Thanks for the ideas-
>Tim
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Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan
nomamasboy@hotmail.com
26-05-2006, 06:21 PM
Dr- thanks for the pics of the kousa in the front yard. I love the
flowers it puts out...does it bear fruit though? I've heard alot of
flowering trees bear fruit of various sizes...the smaller, less
conspicuous and less messy the better for me. Of course that may not be
possible in the smaller trees I'm interested in.
Bill thanks for the suggestions...I've been trying to find some pics of
stewardia or franklinia without much success. They seem to be rare
trees that are difficult to find --which doesn't discourage me though.
The kousa you mentioned has great flowers and appears to about the
right size, but I wanted to know do the lower branches get far off the
ground? The reason I ask is I'd like to maximize my backyard view of
the sunset under the canopy of the trees if possible so a tree that
branches near the ground would let me do that.
I'm sure I'm being too picky, but if there is a flowering tree out
there that's not too tall and branches 3-4 off the ground then maybe
some more educated folks might be able to point me in the right
direction.
Thanks again for all your help
Tim
dr-solo@wi.rr.xx.com
27-05-2006, 04:53 PM
yes, bright red berries which ARE delicious. good luck getting them before the birds
tho. no, they really arent messy.
there is no reason why you cant cut the lower branches and leave a clean trunk 3-4
feet off the ground.
the scenario of watching the sunset brings to mind Japanese custom and the kousa is
definitely that kind of airy feeling .. much like the small maples, but a kousa never
has a dense canopy, it is always open and the branches can be weighted to gracefully
arch downward. Ingrid
" > wrote:
>Dr- thanks for the pics of the kousa in the front yard. I love the
>flowers it puts out...does it bear fruit though? I've heard alot of
>flowering trees bear fruit of various sizes...the smaller, less
>conspicuous and less messy the better for me. Of course that may not be
>possible in the smaller trees I'm interested in.
>The kousa you mentioned has great flowers and appears to about the
>right size, but I wanted to know do the lower branches get far off the
>ground? The reason I ask is I'd like to maximize my backyard view of
>the sunset under the canopy of the trees if possible so a tree that
>branches near the ground would let me do that.
>
>I'm sure I'm being too picky, but if there is a flowering tree out
>there that's not too tall and branches 3-4 off the ground then maybe
>some more educated folks might be able to point me in the right
>direction.
>
>Thanks again for all your help
>Tim
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at
http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/
sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?hl=en&q=puregold&qt_s=Group+lookup
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website.
I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan
nomamasboy@hotmail.com
28-05-2006, 06:32 PM
Thank you so much Ingrid for the info. It sounds like the kousa is the
direction I need to look. This is my first fledgling attempt at some
basic landscaping so you guys have been a big help.
I know where to go with my questions...
Have a great Memorial Day!
Tim
Jangchub
05-06-2006, 02:34 PM
Ginkgo biloba
On Fri, 26 May 2006 13:37:34 GMT, wrote:
>cornus kousa http://weloveteaching.com/landscape/kousa/kousa.html
>
" > wrote:
>
>>I wanted to know if anyone could suggest a few types of flowering
>>trees, medium growth rate, zones 5-6 that reach a maximum height of no
>>more than 15-20 feet. I'm partial to the Japanese Cherry Blossom
>>because of its looks (and no fruit), but I think it will be too big for
>>my backyard. I've got a huge maple that has tangled itself around the
>>power lines and will eventually need to be cut down so I'm thinking a
>>few smaller, flowering trees hopefully with no fruit that have a nice
>>fragrance would be great back there.
>>
>>Thanks for the ideas-
>>Tim
>
>
>
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at
>http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/
>sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?hl=en&q=puregold&qt_s=Group+lookup
>www.drsolo.com
>Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website.
>I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site.
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan
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