Cercis canadensis - Eastern Redbud
from $23.07
Cercis canadensis - Eastern Redbud
- deciduous tree with somewhat large heart-shaped leaves
- showy lavender-pink flower clusters in early spring before leaves emerge are very ornamental
- leaves emerge reddish, turning green as they expand
- for full sun to part shade
- grows to 20 to 30 ft high by 25 to 35 ft wide
- flowers on old wood, so only prune after flowering
- a legume in the pea family
- a good early honeybee nectar source
- edible flowers and young seed pods
- this tree develops a taproot that does not transplant well when mature, so best to transplant while young
- native to eastern North America
- grows in zones 4-9
- these are last year's mature seedlings
- ships bareroot, wrapped in a soil-less medium to keep the roots damp
- ships in cool spring, fall, or winter seasons; not during summer
- deciduous tree with somewhat large heart-shaped leaves
- showy lavender-pink flower clusters in early spring before leaves emerge are very ornamental
- leaves emerge reddish, turning green as they expand
- for full sun to part shade
- grows to 20 to 30 ft high by 25 to 35 ft wide
- flowers on old wood, so only prune after flowering
- a legume in the pea family
- a good early honeybee nectar source
- edible flowers and young seed pods
- this tree develops a taproot that does not transplant well when mature, so best to transplant while young
- native to eastern North America
- grows in zones 4-9
- these are last year's mature seedlings
- ships bareroot, wrapped in a soil-less medium to keep the roots damp
- ships in cool spring, fall, or winter seasons; not during summer
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Cercis canadensis - Eastern Redbud
- deciduous tree with somewhat large heart-shaped leaves
- showy lavender-pink flower clusters in early spring before leaves emerge are very ornamental
- leaves emerge reddish, turning green as they expand
- for full sun to part shade
- grows to 20 to 30 ft high by 25 to 35 ft wide
- flowers on old wood, so only prune after flowering
- a legume in the pea family
- a good early honeybee nectar source
- edible flowers and young seed pods
- this tree develops a taproot that does not transplant well when mature, so best to transplant while young
- native to eastern North America
- grows in zones 4-9
- these are last year's mature seedlings
- ships bareroot, wrapped in a soil-less medium to keep the roots damp
- ships in cool spring, fall, or winter seasons; not during summer
- deciduous tree with somewhat large heart-shaped leaves
- showy lavender-pink flower clusters in early spring before leaves emerge are very ornamental
- leaves emerge reddish, turning green as they expand
- for full sun to part shade
- grows to 20 to 30 ft high by 25 to 35 ft wide
- flowers on old wood, so only prune after flowering
- a legume in the pea family
- a good early honeybee nectar source
- edible flowers and young seed pods
- this tree develops a taproot that does not transplant well when mature, so best to transplant while young
- native to eastern North America
- grows in zones 4-9
- these are last year's mature seedlings
- ships bareroot, wrapped in a soil-less medium to keep the roots damp
- ships in cool spring, fall, or winter seasons; not during summer
Cercis canadensis - Eastern Redbud
- deciduous tree with somewhat large heart-shaped leaves
- showy lavender-pink flower clusters in early spring before leaves emerge are very ornamental
- leaves emerge reddish, turning green as they expand
- for full sun to part shade
- grows to 20 to 30 ft high by 25 to 35 ft wide
- flowers on old wood, so only prune after flowering
- a legume in the pea family
- a good early honeybee nectar source
- edible flowers and young seed pods
- this tree develops a taproot that does not transplant well when mature, so best to transplant while young
- native to eastern North America
- grows in zones 4-9
- these are last year's mature seedlings
- ships bareroot, wrapped in a soil-less medium to keep the roots damp
- ships in cool spring, fall, or winter seasons; not during summer
- deciduous tree with somewhat large heart-shaped leaves
- showy lavender-pink flower clusters in early spring before leaves emerge are very ornamental
- leaves emerge reddish, turning green as they expand
- for full sun to part shade
- grows to 20 to 30 ft high by 25 to 35 ft wide
- flowers on old wood, so only prune after flowering
- a legume in the pea family
- a good early honeybee nectar source
- edible flowers and young seed pods
- this tree develops a taproot that does not transplant well when mature, so best to transplant while young
- native to eastern North America
- grows in zones 4-9
- these are last year's mature seedlings
- ships bareroot, wrapped in a soil-less medium to keep the roots damp
- ships in cool spring, fall, or winter seasons; not during summer