English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I need to know the best trees that withstand alot of cold winter wind and snow. No Evergreens please. I have also killed 3 magnolias so none of them.

2007-03-29 07:27:03 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

5 answers

You didn't mention which Zone you are in, but here are some good hardy trees that should do the trick. I've included some characteristics of each so you can find one that fits your needs.

Maples:
Acer ginnala 'Flame' - (Zone 2) 16' high by 12' wide (good small tree with beautiful red/orange fall color, can be multi-trunk or single)
Acer grandidentatum - (Zone 3) 30' high by 20' wide
Acer platanoides 'Emerald Queen' - (Zone 3) 50' high by 40' wide
Acer rubrum 'Northwood' - (Zone 3) 40' high by 35' wide (prefers acidic soils so don't use for high pH soils)

Alder:
Alnus incana - (Zone 3) 20' high by 18' wide (needs moist nutrient rich soils)

Serviceberry:
Amelanchier x grandiflora 'Princess Diana' - (Zone 3) 20' high by 15' wide (edible berries good for jam)

Birch:
Betula occidentalis fontinalis - (Zone 3) 30' high by 20' wide (multi-trunk tree with beautiful cinnamon bark - good for moist soils)

Hackberry:
Celtis occidentalis - (Zone 2) 40' high by 30' wide (excellent for high pH soils)

Ash:
Fraxinus pennsylvanica 'Patmore' - (Zone 2) 45' high by 35' wide

Ginkgo:
Ginkgo biloba 'Autumn Gold' - (Zone 3) 45' high by 35' wide
Ginkgo biloba 'Princeton Sentry' - (Zone 3) 60' high by 20' wide (narrow upright habit - columnar)

Maachia:
Maackia amurensis - (Zone 3) 25' high by 20' wide

Crab Apple:
Malus 'Dolgo' - (Zone 2) 40' high by 40' wide (1 1/4" diameter red fruit)
Malus 'Red Splendor' - (Zone 3) 25' high by 20' wide (pink flowers turn to small bright red fruit that doesn't fall and reddish green leaves)

Aspens:
Populus tremuloides - (Zone 2) 35' high by 20' wide (aspens sucker profusely from the roots so they need to be in a contained area or they spread like crazy)

Oaks:
Quercus macrocarpa - (Zone 3) 55' high by 45' wide (Excellent for high pH soils)

Mountain Ash:
Sorbus aucuparia - (Zone 2) 35' high by 20' wide (orange-red non-edible berries with deep green leaves)

2007-03-29 08:28:47 · answer #1 · answered by Karl 4 · 0 1

What region do you live in? It really depends on the rainfall in your area or how willing you are to water them. Bradford pears are really good, but if you get alot of heavy ice they get brittle. They are very good with weather changes. Depending on how high the winds are you may have a problem. They do very well with Oklahoma wind though. In fact they are one of the most popular trees here. Almost anything with "pear" at the end of it's name is a very hardy tree, but they have sorter life spans... they only live for about 25 years. They do very will in drought or flood. They are also very ornamental one website calls them the "perfect street tree". Their flowers are beautiful and I love how they smell. You could also look into a Chanicler Pear or Aristocrat pear. (Contrary to popular belief, they aren't fruit trees)

2007-03-29 08:32:26 · answer #2 · answered by Mommy to Boys 6 · 0 1

I did Yahoo "chilly Hardy Palm timber", result: "chilly Hardy Palm timber Are pink flamingoes nonetheless your theory of backyard and backyard decor, even even with the reality that Christmas is coming near? if so, then enable's settle for it: wintry climate panorama layout is totally not your cup of tea. you'll desire a tropical panorama layout -- you purely do not take position to stay interior the tropics. yet do not enable that provide up you. chilly hardy palm timber do exist. in reality, The Hardiest palms, a internet web site committed completely to disseminating information on chilly hardy palm timber, notes that one species of palm tree has withstood temperatures as low as -20°F!" opt for ther first link interior the outcomes.

2016-12-02 23:42:19 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Look into elms, oaks, ash, or cypress. Sycamore and Maple may also work.

2007-03-29 07:30:30 · answer #4 · answered by Ron B. 7 · 0 1

try a hemlock

2007-03-29 07:31:06 · answer #5 · answered by nivek191 3 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers