Evergreen Shade Trees And Deciduous Shade Trees
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Pond
Cypress - Taxodium Ascendens
The Chinese Elm - Tree Ulmus Parvifolia
Bald Cypress Tree - Taxodium Distichum
American Hop Hornbeam - Carpinus
Caroliniana
The Chinese Elm Tree, Ulmus Parvifolia, is acknowledged for its
significantly speedy growth in providing swift shade. The
Chinese Elm is one of the easiest shade trees to relocate and
be capable of growing over 6 feet / 1.83m in one year if cared
for appropriately. The American Hop Hornbeam, Carpinus
Caroliniana, is used as an under-planted shade tree that,
throughout the fall, leaf transformation, glows vibrantly in
yellow to gold colors. The Bald Cypress Tree, Taxodium
Distichum makes an outstanding clean shade tree extensively
adapted to grow healthy on a diversity of soil types. The Bald
Cypress leaves change to yellow for a short time in the fall.
The Bald Cypress has a small leaf size that requires no raking.
The Pond Cypress shade tree, Taxodium Ascendens, is a wonderful
tree to grow around pond-houses and wetland gardens, but ought
not on the whole be grown in well-drained locations. The pond
cypress roots rise from the water, bloated and large and are
called cypress knees.
Black
Gum - Nyssa Sylvatica
Chinese Parasol Tree -Firmiana Simplex
Water Tupelo - Nyssaceae Nyssa aquatica
L.
The Black Gum shade tree, Nyssa Sylvatica, grows very healthy
in wetlands and shade, providing numerous advantageous benefits
for the many aquatic plants. The Water Tupelo shade tree, also
known as Tupelo Gum, and Sour Gum grows aquatically in numerous
lowland wet sites. The leaves of the black gum and the water
tupelo shade trees transform to yellow-gold and orange in the
fall. The Chinese Parasol Tree, Firmiana Simplex, forms an
umbrella or parasol-like canopy with large bat-shaped leaves
that change dazzling yellow, then orange, in the fall.
Ginkgo Biloba
Weeping Willow - Salix Babylonica
Catalpa Tree - Catalpa Bignonioides
Lombardy Poplar Tree - Populus Nigra
Chinese Tallow Tree - Sapium Sebiferum
Corkscrew Willow - Salix Matsudana Tortuosa
The Green Ash - Fraxinus Pennsylvanica
Lanceolata
The Catalpa Tree, Catalpa Bignonioides known as the fish bait
tree has been utilized for centuries as a shade tree that
attracts worms to be used for fish bait in fishing. The Chinese
Tallow Tree, Sapium Sebiferum, is a speedy growing little shade
tree that manifests a kaleidoscope of colors on leaves in the
fall of vivid yellow, red, orange, blue, and purple.
The Chinese tallow tree sprouts seedpods in
the fall that resemble popcorn after the leaves fall off, that
is why it is also known as the popcorn tree. The Corkscrew
Willow, Salix Matsudana "Tortuosa," and the Weeping Willow,
Salix babylonica, grow very speedily into shade trees with
characteristic linear leaves that change yellow in the
fall.
Ginko
Biloba The Ginkgo shade tree,
Ginkgo Biloba, is likely one of the most famous shade
trees known and its radiant yellow-gold leaves that stay
on the tree for a week or more when they drop down to
create a bright yellow circle beneath the bleak limbs.
Fossilized ginkgo leaves have been found in Oriental
archaeological excavations.
The Green Ash, Fraxinus Pennsylvanica
Lanceolata, is a quick growing shade tree and is valuable
specimen in a planned landscape. The Lombardy Poplar Tree,
Populus Nigra, is another fast growing tree, with an upright
form that is regularly planted as hedges and windbreaks in the
Western United States.
Evergreen Trees For Shade - Shade Trees Information Facts
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Evergreen Trees For Shade - Shade Trees Information Facts
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Evergreen Trees For Shade - Shade Trees Information Facts
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Evergreen Trees For Shade - Shade Trees Information Facts
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Evergreen Shade Trees And Deciduous
Shade Trees page 3
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