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An
ornamental tree is one that is described as either
non-native to the British Isles or a named cultivar
of a native species. They range from the small,
at about 5 metres in height when mature, to the
medium, at up to 10 metres. Anything bigger than
this would not be suitable for a small garden.
There
is a wealth of ornamental trees to choose from,
and the hard part is finding the right tree for
the job you want it to do. You will have to begin
by consdering several points about the plant and
the plot where you hope to plant it:
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Purpose
- Evergreen
or deciduous
- Autumn
colours, blossom, fruits, bark
-
Specimen or infill
-
Final height required
-
In a Pot or planted in the ground.
-
Impact
-
Proximity to buildings / neighbours
-
Shade thrown, and rain shadow
-
Leaf / fruit fall
-
Will it blend or clash, is the scale of tree
to garden correct
-
Later pruning
-
Is the soil suitable?
-
Is it in a wind tunnel?
-
Shade or sun required
-
Water requirements
We
would be happy to talk through these considerations
with you. Even when you have decided on a particular
tree the decision making process is not quite
over.You will still need to consider the questions
of budget and height – the two are intimately
linked!
Typically an ornamental of specimen tree will
be in a 10-12 litre pot (see Pot Sizes)
at between 1.5 and 2.0 metres in height. We do
sell bigger Standards at 3.0 - 5.0 metres, and
these can be very rewarding in terms of immediate
impact, but they also represent a far more demanding
undertaking with regards to planting and staking.
However, we do offer a planting service (see Planting).
If
we don't stock exactly what you seek, we may still
be able to source it for you quickly and at a
competitive price. The more unusual and rare trees
may be rootballed or bare rooted. These are perfectly
viable but slower to establish, as they need to
form a generous root structure before they can
repay you with top growth.
However
the tree reaches you the fundamentals for success
remain the same, provided the situation is good:
plant it, water it and maintain it. See our specialised
advice pages linked from the Information
main menu.
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