Anonymous wrote:Up until this month, my favorite tree was the jacaranda, which is pictured (or a link; can't remember) on page 1 of this post. It's a beautiful purple-flowered tree but it does not grow here. It grows in Southern California, badly by the coast because it doesn't like an ocean breeze, but fabulously just a little bit inland like in Pasadena.
However, these dogwoods have just knocked my socks off, how they sort of look like shelves of flowers, the way the branches go horizontally. Incredible! And I love that the dogwoods are still in bloom, not just a couple of days, and no rainstorm gets in their way!
There was a tree where the flowers look like pinkish purple tulips--in bloom a few weeks ago--so beautiful, but gone by the time these dogwoods came out. What was that?

Sorry for the ignorance, but what's a 'mulch volcano'?

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for this thread, and please post more pictures of the trees! I'm not from here, and this is a nice thread to refer to! The pictures are beautiful!!!
Which of the ones mentioned so far is the smallest, with shallow noninvasive- roots, does anyone know?
Here you go:
http://www.nps.gov/plants/pubs/chesapeake/pdf/chesapeakenatives.pdf
If you want to plant check height and space. Don't plant to close to a house for example. All trees have roots close to the surface. Don't make a mulch volcano. That's not healthy for the roots.
Anonymous wrote:Fringe trees are also amazing. They're also natives. Mount Vernon planted a bunch when they built the new visitors center and they look fabulous. It was the first time I'd seen them.



