Live Oak 45gal
- Request a Quote: 682-327-8775
Trees
-
Live Oaks
A large, stately tree, commonly to 50 feet tall with a short, stout trunk of 4 feet or more in diameter, dividing into several large, twisting limbs that form a low, dense crown that can spread more than 100 feet, the limbs often touching the ground in open-grown settings. Widely planted as a landscape tree in Texas.
View Inventory -
Red Oaks
A large forest tree reaching heights of 100 feet or more and a trunk to 3 feet in diameter, with a wide-spreading, symmetrical crown. It often occurs as a single tree or in small groups in forest stands, and is an excellent landscape tree. Provides great fall color, with leaves turning russet-red to bright red.
View Inventory -
Little Gem Magnolias
The Little Gem Magnolia is the perfect tree for your yard if you are looking big leaves and beautiful white flowers. The Little Gem reaches only 20-25 feet with a spread of 8-12 feet and has a slow growth-rate, approximately 1 1/2 feet per year.
View Inventory -
Crape Myrtles
Crape myrtle trees provide year-round interest and color with their showy summer blooms and offer many colors from white to shades of white, pink, deep red and purple, and can be grown as single or multi-trunk specimens. With all of these options, you’ll be able to find the perfect crape myrtle for your garden.
View Inventory -
Cedar Elms
Cedar elm is a large, oval-rounded tree growing 50-70ft high and 40-60ft wide. Cedar elms are nicely-proportioned, hardy, drought tolerant shade tree for a broad range of soil types. It brings vivid yellow color to the landscape in autumn. No need to rake the small leaves because they compost nicely.
View Inventory -
Eastern Red Cedars
Since these trees can reach 50 to 60 feet tall and spread 15 to 25 feet, we like to space them 6 to 8 feet apart for a dense privacy screen or perimeter planting. This tree grows at a medium rate, with height increases of 13–24in per year. Resistant to extremes of drought, heat, and cold.
View Inventory