Red Rome Beauty Apple Tree
Nature Hills NurseryNature Hills Nursery
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Red Rome Beauty Apple Tree

USD 139.99

Description

Rosy red round fruit, the Red Rome Beauty Apple Tree (Malus domestica 'Rome') is a medium-large, Apple with lovely greenish-white, fine-grained, juicy flesh that is perfect for baking because it holds together great when cooked! These spur-bearing trees are named after the Ohio town where this chance seedling was discovered. Hardy throughout USDA growing zones 6 through 9, you can try pairing with an early season and a late season ripening Apple tree to extend your harvest! The late-arriving fragrant blossoms show up later to avoid lingering spring frosts to ensure an abundant crop by September to October. Red Rome Beauty Apple Trees are moderately self-fruitful on their own, however, you will enjoy a larger harvest when you plant multiple Red Rome Apples or among other Apple trees with a similar bloom time. No room? Prune your tree as needed for size, or try high-density planting when landscape spacing is at a premium. Planting and Application: Apple trees are more than just fruit trees, Rome Beauty is indeed beautiful and the drifts of white late-spring blooms make these ornamental flowering trees, and the lush green foliage cast great shade too! Then the fruit arrives and the entire tree is bedecked in gleaming red gems! Four seasons of beauty on a sturdy edible landscaping tree! Red Rome Beauty Apple Trees attract bees and butterflies, and wildlife loves the fruit, even birds will enjoy nesting in the strong branching. If you have the room, create groupings of these trees for shade, habitat, and increased pollination. Another great space-saving method of increasing pollination is to create hedgerows along your property line of Apple trees for a linear orchard that serves as privacy and property definition! Flavorful Rosy Red Round Apples Fine-Grained Greenish-White Flesh Fantastic Firm Texture For Baking & Preserves Fragrant White Spring Blooms Harvest September to October Double-Duty Ornamental Fruit Trees #ProPlantTips for Care: Apple trees need full sun and at least 6 hours of direct sunlight a day. Morning sun is best, as the strong rays quickly dry off the foliage from overnight dew. Plant Apple trees in fertile, well-drained soil, enriched with compost and organic matter. Provide air circulation, and choose a site with slightly acidic soil, with a sandy-loam medium. Plan to supply a regular schedule of water. This is critical during the first year in your landscape. Add supplemental water during fruit development every year and during drought. Add a 3-4 inch layer of arborist mulch. Prune in late winter to maintain a vase-shaped canopy with scaffolding branches at a 45-degree angle. Remove branches that cross or shade others, or grow into the interior of the canopy. Your goal is to work to increase sunlight and air circulation in the canopy. Check out our Garden Blog Fruit Tree Planting, Fruit tree Success Tips, Fruit tree fertilization, and the best methods for pruning your Fruit trees. Full Sun For The Most Fruit Provide Organically Rich Well-Drained Soil Needs Regular Moderate Moisture Appreciates Mulched Beds Prune Early Spring ~700 Chill Hours Red Rome Beauty Apples are a beautiful round red fruit with fragrant drifts of white flowers! Late-season blooms & fruit are awaiting you now at Nature Hills! Apple Tree Frequently Asked Questions How long does it take for Apple Trees to bear fruit? Nature Hills Nursery sells fruit trees with mature root systems that are already three to four years old, so you'll enjoy fruit sooner than you would with younger trees! Expect your young Apple tree to begin fruiting usually by the 2nd-4th year after you plant them. How Fast Do Apple Trees Grow? Once your Apple tree has been established (after the first year), it can typically add 12-18 inches of new growth in a growing season. If your plants are adding less than that in a season, it may be worth your while to check the fertility level. Where do Apple Trees Grow Best? Apple trees grow best in well-drained, fertile soil in at least 6 hours of full sun per day or more. Provide good air circulation and moderate, yet consistent water. They do need very well-drained soil. Do You Need 2 Apple Trees to Produce Fruit? Many Apple trees are self-fertile, however planting more than one Apple tree that blooms at about the same time, boosts yields on both trees and extends your harvest time! The Apple Tree is self-pollinating and doesn't need a pollinator to produce fruit. Apple trees that need a pollinator partner will have the appropriate tree(s) listed for you to choose from. Nature Hills Nursery lists pollinators for each tree on the product pages. This gives you must-have information right at your fingertips! No room? Look into High-Density Planting techniques, or choose a semi-dwarf or dwarf fruit tree. When Should Apple Tree be Planted? Bareroot Apple trees can be planted in spring when they are available in your area. Container-grown Apple trees can be very successfully transplanted all throughout the growing season. Check the first and last frost dates for your area with your local County Extension Office. Plant bareroot Apple trees in the early spring. Plant container-grown trees anytime the ground is not frozen by digging a hole as deep as the soil line and twice as wide. How Do I Find Apple Trees for Sale Near Me? Make your life more flavorful and your landscape work for you by shopping for Apple trees at NatureHills.com online fruit tree nursery. You'll find a massive selection of fruit trees for sale, including many lovely Apple tree varieties! Choose the right tree for your area by first finding your USDA growing zone by entering your zip code in the field above the Plant Highlights section on our product pages. Narrow down your options by plant hardiness zone, sun availability, and size requirements. Place your order, knowing it's backed by the Nature Hills Nursery product guarantee and protected by Plant Sentry™, which helps ensure regulated plant materials aren't sent to prohibited areas. Expect to receive your plants at the appropriate planting time for your growing zone when temperatures are safest for those plants that ship in fall, winter, or early spring. What shipping options do you offer? NatureHills.com works closely with our growers and nursery professionals to ensure we ship when it is most appropriate for your area. Our goal is to deliver the hardiest plants by avoiding extreme high and low temperatures. Check out our shipping schedule for more information and to learn our wills and won'ts when it comes to shipping plants. Find your Apple Tree for sale here at NatureHills.com!

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Jane Magnolia Tree

Jane Magnolia Tree

Jane Magnolia for Smaller Yards Beautiful, Fragrant Spring Flowers Small Tree or Large Hedge Blooms a Bit Later Than Other Magnolias Full Sun Long-Lasting Reddish-Purple Tulip-Shaped Blooms Hardy & Adaptable Care-Free Attractive Foliage Specimen Plant or Privacy Hedge! The beautiful Jane Magnolia tree (Magnolia x 'Jane') is prized for its abundant, long-lasting reddish-purple blooms, fragrance and showy color. Plant them as a hedge along your house or as a single accent at the edge of a patio planting bed. Jane gives you all the fabulous features you love, without having to make a commitment to a lot of space or care. You'll adore the 8-9 inch, tulip-shaped flowers of purple with white centers, appearing in late spring, prior to its leaves. It will keep reblooming here and there throughout the season. This is a hardy plant. You won't have to fuss over it in order to enjoy its performance. 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Green Columnar Juniper Bush

Green Columnar Juniper Bush

Do you have that one difficult spot in your yard where you just need to add a stunning color? Green Columnar Juniper (Juniper chinensis 'Hetzii Columnaris') is the upright evergreen shrub for you! Green Columnar has a strong pyramidal upright form and grows to 15 feet in height with a tapering top and wider base. The foliage is a rich dark green that will not burn in the sun or bronze in the cold of winter. While this Juniper will grow to 12-15 feet tall it will only be 4-6 feet wide. Young Green Columnar shrubs will have an open look but as they mature they will become fuller and denser. The leaves are scale-like with a deep rich green color. As they mature the leaves will become darker with a hint of blue. Older female shrubs will develop clusters of round blue-black berry-like seed cones. Trouble-free and deer-resistant finish this shrub off nicely. Landscape Application: You can use this vertical growing shrub in any area in your landscape. Green Columnar is a super tough evergreen that is perfect for those difficult spots. If you have rocky soil or your area has heat and drought then take a look at this shrub! From accents and group plantings to hedges and privacy screenings, Green Columnar is great at softening unsightly chain-link fences or the neighbor's messy backyards. Birds will flit in the shelter of the evergreen branches and happily pluck the berry-like cones in the fall and winter months (on female shrubs). Green Columnar Juniper can also be planted in containers and boxes. You can even clip and train this tall evergreen bush into spirals and other upright topiary shapes! You can even try your hand at creating unique Bonsai specimens! The uses are limitless with this shrub! Bright Green Branches Upright Tapering Tall Shrubs Bird-Friendly Black Berry-Like Cones For Birds Won’t Burn Or Fade In The Sun Narrow Hedges, Groupings, Specimens & Container Thrillers #ProPlantTips for Care: This evergreen Juniper bush should be planted in full sun and well-drained soil where it grows best, being extremely long-lived and low-maintenance once established. Green Columnar is cold and heat-hardy and will thrive where many plants will not. Provide regular water throughout the first year in the ground, but after that, Junipers are drought tolerant. It can be clipped, sheared, or pruned in the spring, or left to grow naturally. Full Sun Shrubs Any Well-Drained Soils Moderate Moisture to Low Once Established Prune Early Spring Seldom Bothered By Deer Slim and tall, the vertical evergreen Green Columnar Juniper bush will add height and year-round color to your landscape! Order this one-of-a-kind tough little upright Juniper from Nature Hills!

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Climbing Hydrangea

Climbing Hydrangea

Climbing Hydrangea Vine Fragrant Blooms in Shade Slow to Establish, Becoming More Vigorous Grows in Shade Four Seasons of Interest Wonderfully Fragrant Flowers, Green Leaves, Stems Large Flat Lacecap Flowers From May Persisting Into Summer Lush, Dark Green Summer Foliage Turns Yellow for Fall Exfoliating Bark Delivers Winter Interest Attracts Butterflies Long-Lived and Easy Care Blooms Last for Long Bloom Period Loves Hot/Humid Conditions Grows in Full Shade and Part Sun Great Cut Flowers Fresh and Dried If you have more shade than sun, or just have a few shady spots to decorate, try the easy-care Climbing Hydrangea (Hydrangea anomala petiolaris). This perennial vine produces beautiful white lace-cap flowers in late spring and early summer. And it blooms in shade! How nice to finally be able to brighten up those dimly lit areas in your garden. The Climbing Hydrangea vine is an extremely versatile vine with year-round interest. 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Climbing Hydrangea also can be grown as a flowering groundcover in shady areas or on steep embankments. When left unsupported, the plant mounds to about 3 feet tall and will scramble over the ground. That's much safer and prettier than trying to mow turf on a slope. On a slope, plant near the top, and point the plants downhill. Plant 6 feet apart on center, measuring from the center of one to the center of the next. Manage their growth by positioning new stems downhill as needed. Keep mass plantings mulched and weeded as they fill in. Add additional rows 20 - 30 feet further downhill. #ProPlantTips for Care These lovely deciduous vines grow well in moist, well-drained soils with plenty of organic matter added to planting. It prefers an acid soil of 6 to 6.5 but is adapted to a wide range of soil types as long as the drainage is good.  They are very cold hardy but will need a moderate amount of regular water. Use the Finger Test to see if they need additional water. Push your finger into the soil up to the second knuckle. Is it getting dry? Give it a long drink. Still moist? Skip watering that day. Climbing Hydrangea will not do well in full sun, give it a partial shade setting for the best results. In colder Zone 5 or in high humidity climates, it can handle more direct morning sun with afternoon shade. If you live in a drier climate or in Zones 8, 9 and 10, you should plant in full shade. Mulch the root zone 3 to 4 inches deep to keep surface roots consistently moist and cool. Please note that they do take time to get established in your soil. This plant is slow to establish but once it gets well rooted in the ground, the vigor improves dramatically. It is also slow to come into flower, so please remember that patience is a virtue and these gorgeous blooms are worth the wait! They definitely fit that old garden adage "the first year they sleep, the second year they creep and the third year they leap!" Give it a very sturdy structure to grow on. They'll add so much beauty to shady spots around your yard. Just supply a sturdy trellis for them to climb on and watch them go! The plant is nearly disease and pest free. The most common problem is chlorosis caused by higher pH soils. Fertilize with Dr. Earth's Acid Lovers Natural and Organic Premium Fertilizer in the fall and after blooming to keep the plant healthy and soil pH acidic. It blooms on last year's wood, so prune right after its blooms start to fade in the late spring to early summer. Left alone, Climbing Hydrangea develops a bushy, informal habit. Keep it neat and uniform with regular light summer pruning. Finding Climbing hydrangea for sale can be a challenge. Buy yours from Nature Hills before we sell out Frequently Asked Questions How to Grow a Climbing Hydrangea?  Climbing Hydrangea vines do well in moist, well-drained soils with ample acidic organic matter. THey need regular water and protection from full sun. How quickly do Climbing Hydrangeas grow? Climbing Hydrangea are slower growing while they are establishing, but then start growing a bit faster once they’re settled. These are long-lived plants and aren’t in any hurry, knowing they’re in it for the long haul, eventually reaching a mature height of 30-40 feet. Do Climbing Hydrangeas like sun or shade? How much sun do Climbing Hydrangeas need? Climbing Hydrangea does best in full shade to partial sun/shade, so if you have a full sun location, you are better planting a Climbing Rose, but for that hard to fill the niche of full shade, Climbing Hydrangea are the perfect flowering climbing plant! Provide your Climbing Hydrangea a minimum of all-day dappled shade or 2-4 hours of direct light. Is Climbing Hydrangeas invasive? Climbing Hydrangea are not invasive and grow slow enough to be able to keep them contained and from getting into trouble. What Shipping Options Do You Offer? NatureHills.com works closely with our growers and nursery professionals to ensure we ship when it is most appropriate for your area. Our goal is to deliver the hardiest plants by avoiding extreme high and low temperatures. Check out our shipping schedule for more information and to learn our wills and won’ts when it comes to shipping plants. Find your Autumn Blooming Cherry for sale here at NatureHills.com!

USD 39.99

Patriot Hosta

Patriot Hosta

A light the dark, the Patriot Hosta (Hosta 'Patriot') has heart-shaped, glossy medium green leaves with a large white margin, making this variety very striking! The large leaves have bold, coarse texture that seems to gracefully waterfall over each other to create a tidy and orderly mound. The lavender flowers bloom in mid-summer and attract a following of hummingbirds and pollinators! You'll enjoy placing these scented trumpet-shaped flowers on their tall scapes in your bouquets! They shoot up from the foliage on strong, tall stems seemingly made for butterflies to perch themselves on. Patriot provides a bright splash of color with its fabulous foliage in shady places often in need of that extra "pop"! Patriot Hosta is a former winner of "Hosta of the Year" from the American Hosta Growers. One look, and you'll see why it was beloved by judges and gardeners alike! Wonderfully cold-hardy and shade tolerant, these herbaceous perennials grow throughout USDA hardiness zones 3 to 8 and can reach nearly 3 feet in height when in bloom, while spreading just 2 feet wide. Planting and Application: This is a low-care perennial and is ideal for shady positions and is one of the most popular for landscapes. Growing effectively in woodland settings or shade gardens, Hosta are never a challenge! They make it easy to create a restful spot that fills bare ground and lights up the shade! Create your own shade-loving perennial display with Ferns, Barrenwarts, Coral Bells, and of course other Hosta! Use this low-care perennial in dappled and understory settings, as edging plants, foundation plantings, or in large garden planters. Patriot offers effortless style for many years, making it a favorite for beginners and experienced gardeners alike. Underplant your flowering ornamental trees with this outstanding shade garden workhorse! Add Patriots bold foliage skirts around your favorite urn, arbor, garden bench or a shrub that may be a bit leggy. Use as facer plants along the shady side of an evergreen hedge or your foundation shrubs for a clean transition between lawn and garden! Unique Variety - Showy Leaves are Large and Heart-Shaped Corrugated Blue-Toned Foliage Features Silvery Overcast Fragrant White Flowers in Summer Supports Beneficial Pollinators & Hummingbirds Large Visual Impact & Sculptural Rounded Accent Perfect Groundcover, Edging, Containers & Specimens #ProPlantTips for Care: Plant Patriot in an area that receives the right amount of light. The leaves need some morning sun to bring out the best coloration. Too much sun will burn the leaves. These herbaceous perennials are at home in consistently moist, well-drained, highly organic soils with a pH between 5.5 and 7.5. Sandy loam is better than clay because it provides more aeration for the roots. When watering, make sure to lift up the leaves and water the soil directly underneath. Those big boisterous leaves can sometimes act like an umbrella and leave the roots dry. Provide moderate yet consistent moisture throughout the growing season and these appreciate a 3-4 inch thick layer of arborist mulch chips to help hold in moisture. It is best to keep areas around Hostas clear of excess leaf debris to reduce the presence of slugs and snails. Deadhead after flowers fade, and clean the foliage away from the plant once it dies back in the autumn. Full Shade/Partial Shade Moderate /Consistent Moisture Needs Enriched Well-Drained Soil Effortlessly Easy-Care with Minimal Maintenance Prune Back Foliage Late Autumn Very Cold Hardy & Heat Tolerant Order Elegans Hosta from Nature Hills today. You'll be thrilled with the commercial-grade quality of our plant material. It's easy to track your study shipping box right to your doorstep! Give new plants a long drink and follow our planting instructions. Frequently Asked Questions Do Hostas need full sun or shade? Hosta does best in full sun in cooler climates but does appreciate afternoon protection from the worst of the summer sun, especially in the hottest of their growing zone range. In the hottest climates, Hosta like partial shade or dappled shade, and some varieties will do great in full shade. Where do Hostas grow best? Hosta plants love enriched, well-drained soil that is moderately yet consistently moist throughout the growing season. They appreciate mulched garden beds. Do Hostas come back every year? Are Hostas a perennial plant? With vigorous carefree growth, Hostas are herbaceous perennial plants that will return year after year with little maintenance. What do you do with Hostas in the fall? What do you do with Hostas in the winter? Hosta leaves will die back after frost but the crowns and roots remain intact and dormant until next spring. Prune back the leaves once they turn brown in the autumn and remove them from the plant's area. For winter protection, add a layer of compost or mulch over the crowns to protect them from the chill. Do Hosta attract hummingbirds or pollinators? Hostas are loved by pollinators and hummingbirds! All walks of beneficial pollinators will show up to sip their nectar. What Shipping Options Do You Offer? NatureHills.com works closely with our growers and nursery professionals to ensure we ship when it is most appropriate for your area. Our goal is to deliver the hardiest plants by avoiding extreme high and low temperatures. Check out our shipping schedule for more information and to learn our wills and don'ts when it comes to shipping plants. Find your Hosta Plants for sale here at NatureHills.com!

USD 36.19

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