Lavender Rhododendron
Lavender Rhododendrons provide a lush, elegant accent to any outdoor space, all year long. Huge, fragrant purple blooms will explode with grwth eve...
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Lavender Rhododendrons provide a lush, elegant accent to any outdoor space, all year long. Huge, fragrant purple blooms will explode with grwth eve...
View full detailsRemember the lyrics to this popular nursery rhyme?: “All around the mulberry bush…”: Well, now you can hum this popular tune while you pick delicio...
View full detailsThis grass has been cultivated to bring you neat growth, height and visual interest through winter, even in hard-to-grow areas. The Karl Foerster G...
View full detailsFew plants put on such an epic display of rhododendrons in the springtime. When the spring bulbs emerge, the white rhododendron will soon follow wi...
View full detailsFor a hardy tree that gives off year-round color, the Fat Albert Spruce is a perfect choice! Its silver-blue foliage adds some unique color to any ...
View full detailsPlant size fluctuates with the variety and type of plant. Two gallon bushes are usually between 10 inches to 2.5 feet tall and 10 to 22 inches wide. Spreading, low growing shrubs tend to be wider, but shorter in height. While trees and upright shrubs tend to be taller, but more narrow. Most flowering shrubs like azaleas will be rounded and as tall as they are wide. Dwarf shrubs tend to be on the smaller side because they grow slower above ground and to a more compact size at maturity.
This nursery pot size is just right for those of you who want the best of both worlds. 2 gallon plants are more developed than 1 gallon plants, but less expensive than 3 gallon. This size is a great size to get started with, not too small and not too hard on the wallet.
Two gallon pots are generally 8 to 10 inches wide and tall. They are usually slightly taller than they are wide, but this varies depending on the container manufacturer.
We suggest planting most of our bushes and trees in the ground for the best growth. But for plants that grow well in pots, like dwarf citrus trees, Japanese Maples, rose bushes and trees, and houseplants, up-pot to a planter no more than twice the size of the current nursery pot. We recommend a plant container size around 5 gallons. This means the container you pick will be around 10 to 12 inches tall and wide. For Drift Roses, you could use a hanging basket around 14 inches wide.
We carry 1 gallon, 2 gallon, and 3 gallon plant container sizes in shrubs, plants, and trees. Most of our trees come in 3, 5 or 7 gallon pots, but these are usually labelled by height. We occasionally carry smaller specialty perennials in quart containers.
Be sure to browse our Plant Sizes for additional options!