Where to buy evergreen trees


Evergreen Trees | Buy Evergreen Trees Online

As interesting and beautiful as deciduous plants can be, there are often situations when developing your property where only plants that stay green all year will do. This is especially true when you want privacy. You may be able to get a nice dense screen for half the year from a deciduous planting, but in winter when everything is bare that screen suddenly becomes a gossamer curtain and hides nothing at all. That is when evergreens really stand out as the best solution.

As well, when constructing interesting and varied gardens, dense, rich green plants that give permanence and structure to the scene are essential. In winter being able to see the ‘bones’ of the garden means there is still some interest and color at that quiet time of the year.

Conifers and Needle Evergreens

There are several distinct groups of evergreens. Firstly there are the conifers, or needle evergreens, plants like cypress, pine and juniper. These are interesting plants that don’t have flowers but instead produce cones of different kinds. Some like pine cones are well known, but other conifers produce much smaller seed structures that can look a bit like strange hard berries.

Perhaps the most famous are the juniper ‘berries’ that are used in cooking venison and even more in flavoring gin. Without junipers there would be no martinis. These plants have narrow leaves that are sometimes like the needles on a pine and other times more scaly and flat against the stem like a cypress, with several kinds in-between as well.

Not all conifers are evergreen. A few are what are often called ‘deciduous conifers’ and the most notable is the Bald Cypress, which naturally grows in wet soil, but which will be happy in ordinary, reasonably moist soil too. Every fall it turns lovely yellow and brown shades before shedding its leaves for the winter as if it was a maple tree.

Broad-Leaf Evergreens

The second group are usually called broad-leaf evergreens because they are pretty much like other trees and shrubs except that they only lose their leaves after new ones are made, not before like many trees do. This means there is no time of year where there are no leaves on these plants, but otherwise they have flowers and fruits in the same way as deciduous plants do. There are many plants like this, from azalea and boxwood to holly, and they come in all sizes with some of them being big enough to be considered trees.

Bamboo Plants

The third group are quite different. Everyone is familiar with grasses, which produce their stalks each year and then die down leaves in the winter. They can be the wheat and corn we eat, or the grass on our lawns. In warmer areas however grasses figured out how to keep their stems alive all year and started to behave like trees. These are the Bamboo Plants, which are really a giant kind of grass that almost never flowers. These beautiful plants produce clumps of strong canes to carry their leaves and stay green all year round. In some tropical countries they form forests in the same way maple trees do for us. Some can grow an amazing 100 feet tall, but the ones we offer to use in your garden grow between 8 and 30 feet tall, so they are great plants for evergreen structure and screening.

You may have heard horror stories about Bamboo plants taking over and spreading like crazy, but at the Tree Center we are careful that all the bamboo plants we offer are the clump-forming type, not those with underground roots that spread. Clump-forming bamboos are the well-behaved ones and they will stay where you put them. Each clump will grow wider of course but it won’t take over your garden.

Evergreen Trees in Your Garden

Evergreen Trees have many uses and a valuable role to play in our gardens.

Using Evergreens as Hedges

Because they are green all year and often make very dense, leafy growth, one of the main uses for evergreen trees is as hedges and screens. There are so many properties which are either overlooked by neighbours or look out onto something rather ugly, that almost everyone needs to make some kind of a hedge for privacy. Because they stay green all year, evergreens are the first choice when it comes to choosing plants for hedges.

If a quick hedge is needed the Leyland Cypress is often the ‘go-to’ plant of choice. With a growth-rate of 3 to 4 feet a year, soft foliage, drought resistance and the ability to grow in poor soil, urban conditions and even resist salt-spray, Leyland Cypress is a great choice to build an ‘instant’ hedge and solve your screening problems. Perhaps the only problem it has it that you do need to keep cutting it regularly and control the height, or it can get out of hand. For a hedge in a smaller garden Thuja Green Giant or Thuja Emerald Green can be more manageable choices.

Other conifer trees can also be used for hedges – Juniper Wichita Blue is an interesting idea for a different hedge color especially in a location where drought tolerance is a high priority.

When broad-leaf evergreens are used as hedge plants, the effect is different. They give a dense, glossy hedge with an alternative texture to conifer hedges, which are soft and fuzzy. Popular fast-growing choices for broad-leaf hedges include hollies like the American Holly or the Nellie Stevens Holly. Another great broad-leaf choice is the Cherry Laurel which makes a really dense hedge with large, glossy leaves. If you want to grow low ornamental evergreen hedges then Boxwood Shrubs are the classic choice and grow well in sun or partial shade.

Finally, for a completely different, more informal effect, consider using Bamboo Plants for a hedge or screen. With their elegant, often colored canes and their narrow, pointed leaves they give a very special look that is also very low-maintenance. They don’t need to be clipped into shape but naturally form a dense barrier that can be shortened if needed but don’t clip them too much on the sides. The effect is informal, more modern and gives a very different visual look to a green clipped hedge. As well, the wind blowing through bamboo creates a lovely and unique rustling sound that is really charming.

If you use a strip of grass at the foot of the hedge, mowing the grass will stop the bamboo from possibly spreading sideways and keep it growing densely exactly where you want it to be. Multiplex Bamboo is one of the best for hedges. It will rapidly reach 8 to 12 feet tall, but the tops can be trimmed if necessary. It makes a very dense, impenetrable hedge that protects your property as well as giving privacy. For a taller hedge choose Black Bamboo, which is dense and vigorous and can reach 25 to 30 tall in time.

Specimens

However evergreen trees don’t start and end with hedge plants, as useful as they are for that purpose. Left to grow unclipped, or with perhaps just a little trimming to keep them neat and dense, all the evergreen trees make great specimens for a lawn or as elements in shrub beds. The more upright ones look terrific in clusters of three, five or seven and the broader ones make great single specimens that give permanence, stability and maturity to your landscape and garden.

Shape and Form

With evergreen trees there are lots of shapes to choose from. Striking, dramatic vertical accents come naturally to the Italian Cypress and the Sky Pencil Holly. These plants can reach 40 feet tall and still only be 4 or 5 feet wide without ever having been clipped at all. They add drama and emphasis to the garden and they can also be used to frame an entrance-way or gate or even march along a driveway to great effect. Not so narrow, but still giving strong vertical accents, plants like Thuja Green Giant and the smaller Thuja Emerald Green are popular as specimens too.

For hotter locations where drought-resistance is an important consideration, Juniper Wichita Blue really stands out. For something broader in outline, consider American Holly or the Bald Cypress. Bamboos grown alone look more like the giant grass plants they really are, and as specimens their varied forms, some quite upright like Multiplex Bamboo, other softer in outline, like the Sunset Glow Bamboo, can really be appreciated and enjoyed. They give a unique and graceful form to any garden.

Selecting the Right Evergreen Trees

There are a number of unique variables to consider when choosing which evergreen tree is right for you.

Sun or Shade

All plants have their preferences and evergreens are no exception. If you already have large deciduous trees on your property and are making a garden, then shade is certainly something you need to take into account. Fortunately all the Hollies naturally grow in the shade of larger trees, so they make great choices for shady locations, as specimens or as hedges.

When planting a hedge it is pretty common to have part of it in the sun and another part in the shade. This often leads to uneven growth, or having to switch to another plant, but fortunately Hollies thrive in both sun and shade, so a holly hedge will look thick and healthy whatever amount of sun it is getting. If the shade is only for a part of the day, then Thuja will be happy as long as it gets a little sun. Bamboos are also shade tolerant and will grow well beneath trees as well as when exposed to the full sun. Black Bamboo and Sunset Glow Bamboo are both among the most shade tolerant bamboos available.

If you are gardening in sunny locations, then consider Junipers, which love sunny, drier locations in sandy soils. In fact they don’t like shade and too much water at all. So for a hot, dry garden, choose our Drought Tolerant Evergreen or Juniper Wichita Blue and whether it is a hedge or some specimen trees you want, you can be sure these plants will thrive. Italian Cypress is another evergreen tree that just loves sunshine and dryness and makes a dramatic accent in the landscape.

Wet or Dry

Junipers love the sun and they are happy to live in dry locations too. Once established they are very drought tolerant and they should be the first choices for hot, dry areas. So for dry areas Junipers are the thing, but what if you have a location that is always damp or even wet and boggy? The Bald Cypress naturally grows in swampy locations and although it will be perfectly happy in regular garden situations, it is a terrific choice for low-lying or wet locations, or beside a stream, lake or pond. In between, in regular garden soil that isn’t totally dry all summer, Thuja Green Giant and Thuja Emerald Green will thrive and be perfectly happy. Thuja will also take periods of wet in their stride and even thrive on it as long as it is not all year round.

Bamboos are very adaptable. They will take damp or dry conditions in their stride and our Black Bamboo is known for its outstanding drought tolerance when established. Periods of wet don’t bother them either, but no bamboo really like to live in constantly wet soil.

Cold Hardy

Evergreen trees vary a lot in how much cold they will take. Some are extremely hardy and Thuja Emerald Green is renowned for growing right up into zone 2 in Canada, so no matter how cold your area is, this is an evergreen that will thrive for you. Most people think that Bamboos need warmth but Sunset Glow Bamboo is hardy all the way into zone 5, which makes it a great choice for nearly everyone. Holly likes it a little warmer and finds zone 6 about as far north as it want to go.

How To Plant and Care for Evergreen Trees

If you are planning an evergreen hedge there are two ways to plant them. For a regular hedge they are placed in a single line – the exact distance apart depends on the type of plant you are using. To work out how many plants to order, measure the total distance you want your hedge to cover, divide by the spacing distance and add one plant more, since you will have one at each end.

For a very dense screen you can also plant a double row. Increase the spacing in one row and then plant a second row behind it with each plant staggered from the first row. This makes a zigzag and gives a really dense, private hedge more quickly than a single row will. You need a few more plants for this kind of hedge but the quicker privacy it gives you makes that worthwhile.

Common Mistakes

A big mistake a lot of people make with hedges is to wait until they reach the final height wanted before starting to trim them. You should lightly trim the sides and top of your hedge as soon as your new plants start to grow. That way you build a really dense structure that reaches all the way down to the ground. You will notice that the top grows faster than the bottom, so you need to cut more from the upper sides than lower down to keep the top thinner than the bottom. That way the light reaches all the way down and keeps the bottom growing well.

Also, if you have a fat top on your hedge it is more likely to be damaged by a heavy snow-fall. A thinner, rounded top will shed the snow and stay together so much better. Specimen evergreens can also be trimmed as needed to keep them compact and also to control their shape.

Once planted, Evergreen Trees don’t need a lot of special care. When newly planted it is always important to keep your trees well watered. Once a week give them a deep soak, even if there has been a little rain. Until their roots spread out they can only get water from the root-ball that was in the pot when you planted your tree.

Regular fertilizer is a good idea when your evergreen trees are young. They will grow faster and denser that way. Fertilize in early spring and again in mid-summer, but in colder areas you should stop any feeding by late summer so that the trees can develop the necessary cold-hardiness for the coming winter. Mulches are also a good idea and you will find that Bamboo plants in particular thrive on annual mulch because they tend to grow close to the surface of the soil.

Add Structure and Function to Your Garden with Our Evergreens!

Evergreen Trees have so much to offer in giving structure and function in your garden that it is hard to imagine building a landscape without them. For hedges or specimen plants they have a special quality and an all-year permanence that makes them indispensable. There are types suitable for any location, from shade to sun and from wet to dry and here at the Tree Center we have a full range of all the very best forms so no matter what your needs, we have Evergreen Trees to satisfy them.

Dwarf Evergreen Trees | Buy Evergreens Online

Almost our evergreen trees, from towering redwoods to reliable spruce trees, and from the graceful cedars to sturdy pines, all have special relatives that are among the most important garden plants. These are all small versions of their big parents, often with unique forms and foliage in stunning colors. Bred and collected over the years, there are many to choose from, and these versatile little plants can be used for everything from simple low hedges to stunning specimens of beauty and rarity. Dwarf evergreens add year-round interest to our gardens, and it’s hard to imagine gardening without the support of these sturdy little helpers. Whether you use them in the foreground of your regular beds, plant them in a rock garden, make special display beds just for them, or grow them in planters and pots, these fascinating miniature jewels bring grace, elegance and color to your garden – with the bonus of mostly being very easy to grow and largely trouble-free.

These plants are so important in gardens that we have given them their own section on our site, gathered together, where you can come and meet them, instead of searching for them scattered among their larger relatives – which are mostly plants more suitable for big trees, hedges or screening. Let’s see what you can do with these wonderful Dwarf Evergreens and inspire you to create a better garden. Plants in this section won’t be over 5 or 6 feet tall after 10 years, and most will be much smaller.

Using Dwarf Evergreens in Your Garden

As Specimens

When we set up our beds, we want them to play a tune for us. A rhythmic flow of form and color should lead us along them, catching our attention and making us stop to admire one or the other, depending on the season. Dwarf evergreens are always attractive, so you are guaranteed something interesting in your beds on every day of the year. Many change colors, either dramatically or more subtly, as the seasons pass, so there is always something fresh and unique to see.

The forms of Dwarf Evergreens vary enormously, from flat spreaders to pencil-thin upright columns, with everything in between. No matter what kind of accent you want, there will be a plant for that. They can be used alone, or in groups and clusters – either way you will create wonderful looks.

Among Foundation Plants

Considering how prominent the foundation planting is around your home, it is surprising how often we see it planted with the most boring of round, green plants. If you inherit a mature planting around a new home that is like that, you can work miracles with it by adding interesting shapes and colors in the foreground, or between green bushes. Touches of gold, blue or silver will really make it sparkle and draw attention, and you can frame doors and windows elegantly too, with a classy touch.

In Rock Gardens and On Retaining Walls

Dwarf Evergreens have a natural affinity for rock and stone. So, if you have retaining walls, terracing, or a natural rock garden, these plants are perfectly in scale for it, and fit neatly into pockets among the rocks, or along a terrace. Used in this way, perhaps adding tumbling flowers as well, they give more structural form, and with walls and terracing they break up those long vertical lines very effectively, perhaps with something cascading over their edges.

In Xeric Gardens

There is a spreading trend to reduce or eliminate watering in gardens, in response to shortages and environmental concerns. Many (although not all) of the Dwarf Evergreens are very drought resistant, once they are well established, so they fit perfectly into this trend. Many will grow even in poor soil too, so for projects where you want a ‘plant it and forget it’ garden they are often ideal. Make sure you pick tough guys for this, and avoid more delicate, or miniature types, which may need more care than gardens like this have to offer.

In Their Own Display Beds

Some people become entranced and fascinated by Dwarf Evergreens, and find themselves seeking more and more of the rarest and most exciting types. For these collectors – or for anyone who just likes the neat look of these plants – creating a special bed is an ideal way to grow them. In northern zones there are a relatively limited number of plant types available, but fortunately many of the Dwarf Evergreens are very cold resistant, and thrive in zones 3 and 4. You can make a lovely display bed in your yard for them, which will always look colorful, especially in the coldest months, where most of the trees are bare.

Choose a sunny spot, perhaps on a slope if you have one. Sloping ground ensures good drainage. Prepare the bed and plant it with a diverse collection of Dwarf Evergreens. Remember to space them out well and allow enough room for their mature sizes after 10 years at least. You don’t want it to become a crowded mass, where their individual character will be lost. Place some attractive boulders among them, mulch the bed with gravel or broken stone, and you have a display that will look better and better every year, as the plants turn from new arrivals into mature specimens.

The Appearance of Dwarf Evergreens

Among all the groups of plants, it is with Dwarf Evergreens that we see the greatest diversity of forms. Some, often Junipers, are low-growing carpets, just a few inches tall, but covering in time several square feet, or even yards. These are ideal in the front of beds, especially where they can spread unhindered across paving, or flow over the edge of a wall. Others are slender columns, just a few inches wide, but several feet tall. Pick the ones that do this best naturally, as clipping can give a look that is too formal and artificial, as well as needing work.

In between there are a host of shapes. Some are rounded globes, perfect for accents. Others are neat pyramids, and those can be relatively tall, or very short and broad. Then there are weeping plants that can be allowed to cascade over the ground, or trained up to make graceful curtains of foliage. Each one of these becomes a unique individual, with no two looking the same by the time they mature. You can have fun with them, and guide them as you choose, for something very eye-catching and special.

You can easily see from the photographs of each plant what form it has, so browsing for a particular shape is simple.

Colors of Dwarf Evergreens

We all love to see color in our gardens, and getting it from flowers can be hard work, with just a few weeks a year as reward. Dwarf evergreens bring color 365 days of the year, and they come in many colors. Some have stable, all-year colors, perhaps golds, or silver-blues. Others change more, including many that are bright yellow in spring, and turn more chartreuse in summer. Some turn purple or bronze in winter, which is sometimes not desirable if you want green in winter, but for other plants it can be considered a positive feature. The spectrum of colors available is large – golds and yellows, all tones of blues and silvers, grays, blue-greens, purples, and of course many shades of green. All these colors can be used to good effect to lift your garden and make it more interesting.

Tree Forms of Dwarf Evergreens

You will notice that some plants are listed as ‘Tree Form’. This is also called by nurseries, ‘standard’, but that name tells you very little, since it doesn’t mean ‘normal’, but ‘raised above the ground’, like a flag on a pole. It is possible, with skill, to graft a dwarf evergreen onto a strong stem, between 1 and 3 feet long, which lifts it up into the air, making a taller plant. These Tree Form plants turn a mounding dwarf pine, for example, into a miniature tree 3 or 4 feet tall. Our Tree Form versions of Dwarf Evergreens are perfect for giving extra height in narrow beds, and they really show off the beauty of these little plants.

Growing and Caring for Dwarf Evergreens

Almost all these trees are easy to grow, usually free of pests or diseases, and trouble free. Once established they can be left to take care of themselves, and they will do that well, becoming more and more attractive and substantial over the years. When choosing and planting, remember to take note of the size after 10 years, which we list as ‘mature size’, and also remember that these plants keep growing as long as they live, and can easily become double that size in time – there is no final limit, just age. Don’t make the mistake of planting them too close to walls and paths, or to other plants, just because they look so ‘small and cute’ when you plant them.

Hardiness

In general, Dwarf Evergreens lean towards the colder zones, and many are cold-hardy in zones 3 and 4, while relatively few are hardy in zone 9. Large evergreen trees are characteristic of northern climates. This is a real bonus for northern gardener’s, who don’t have such a big range of other garden plants available to them.

Light Requirements

Full sun is almost always best for Dwarf Evergreens. The growth will be compact and dense, and the colors will be their strongest. Some golden forms can burn in hot summers, so a little afternoon shade may suit them better, with plenty of sun in the morning.

Soil Conditions & Watering

The majority of Dwarf Evergreens need well-drained soil to thrive. Wetness is their enemy, especially in winter. Otherwise they are rarely fussy, although some have a slight preference for acid soils. Many, such as the spruce, tolerate poor soils, including clays, rocky soils and gravels. Overall, they will grow in ordinary garden soil with no trouble, another plus in their favor.

To Trim or Not to Trim?

Almost all the Dwarf Evergreens are naturally dense, be they globes or columns. They rarely need trimming – much of their appeal is in how they grow neatly all by themselves. You can easily spoil their special look with trimming, so we don’t recommend it. The exception is with plants like dwarf arborvitae (Thuja) grown as hedges, or if you need very formal balls, cones or spirals, where you will need to trim.

Staking

When growing most of the weeping and trailing forms, especially with spruce or cedar, you have a choice. You can allow them to grow naturally, and with most varieties that will mean a trailing plant that could spread over a large area. This can be very effective on a slope, among boulders, or spilling over a wall.

The alternative is to train a main stem up a stake, allowing the branches to cascade from it, and creating a tall plant with weeping branches. These trees can be very beautiful as specimens. If you choose this route, start with a strong metal stake, as wood will rot and snap at ground level in time, potentially breaking your tree. You can grow your tree as tall as your stake – above that it will begin to weep and grow downwards. Tie up the chosen branch loosely and check the ties at least once a year to make sure they aren’t cutting into the bark. You could strangle the main stem and kill everything above the tie.

Types of Dwarf Evergreens

Foliage Types

It can be confusing, looking at Dwarf Evergreens, to see plants that have very different foliage, yet with the same species name. Many evergreens have two types of foliage. One type has leaves that are flat scales, attached firmly to the smaller stems. These create sprays or fans of foliage, with a smooth feel. This is called ‘adult foliage’. The other type, always seen in seedlings, is called ‘juvenile foliage’, and in nature it protects the plant from being eaten. The leaves grow outwards and they are often sharp, or they give the plant a fuzzy feel and a ‘softer’ look. Either type can be found in Dwarf Evergreens derived from the same plant species, creating some very different looks and textures. You will usually find which type of foliage each plant has in our detailed plant descriptions.

Examples of Dwarf Evergreens

Arborvitae (Thuja) – these hardy plants, growing well even in zones 2 and 3, are well known for hedging, but there are dwarf forms as well. Several are grown as globes, trimmed or untrimmed, and the most popular are ‘Little Giant’, ‘Hetz Midget’, and the well-named ‘Mr Bowling Ball’. These are green, but there are golden varieties too, such as ‘Golden Globe’. A more upright but still small golden arborvitae is ‘Rheingold’, and for winter interest there is ‘Fire Chief’, which turns red in the cold months.

Japanese Cedar (Cryptomeria) – most of these are taller trees, but there is a small, round one, more refined than the arborvitae, for zones 5 and warmer. Called ‘Dwarf Globe’ it makes a very neat mound, or consider ‘Mushroom’, which is wider than tall, and again very neat.

Cedar (Cedrus) – the spectacular Himalayan, Atlas and Lebanese Cedars are wonderful large trees if you have the room for them and live in at least zone 6. But there are dwarf forms too, such as the globe-shaped ‘Compressa Dwarf’. There are also some wonderful weeping forms, especially the Weeping Blue Atlas Cedar (‘Glauca Pendula’). It is not really a dwarf, but it’s very suitable for trailing down walls or staking into a unique specimen.

Hinoki Cypress (Chamaecyparis obtusa) – this Japanese tree offers some of the most beautiful and elegant dwarf evergreens, often with graceful shell-shaped sprays of foliage. They are too numerous to list, and there are both green and golden forms. Some are conical (e.g. ‘Cripsii’, Fernspray Gold, and Koster’s). Others are more rounded (e.g. ‘Nana Gracilis’ and ‘Nana Lutea’)

False (Sawara) Cypress (Chamaecyparis pisifera) – also from Japan, many of the dwarf varieties of this tree are among the best of the golden evergreens, often with feathery juvenile foliage. Among the best are King’s Gold, Sungold and Gold Mop.

Junipers – among these rugged plants, hardy to zone 3, silver blue is the most common color. The trend is either for flat spreading plants (e.g. ‘Blue Rug’ and ‘Blue Chip’) or very narrow columns (e.g. ‘Pencil Point’). ‘Blue Star’ is a rounded compact plant with a soft look. Many are too large to qualify as ‘dwarf’, but among the bigger ones the Hollywood Juniper deserves mention for its special look, even if it grows over 6 feet tall. Twisting and looping in all directions, each tree is unique, with coral-like clusters of foliage studded with blue berries. Always worthy of a special spot in the garden.

Pine – two of the most widely grown Dwarf Evergreens are pines – the Mugo Pine and the Dwarf White Pine. Mugo pine is available in a range of forms, some more dwarf than others, while a popular Tree Form is made from the Dwarf White Pine. With their distinctive needles these dwarf pines give a look that no other Dwarf Evergreen can bring. Carsten’s Wintergold is a Mugo pine with beautiful golden needles in the winter months, deserving a special place where it can be admired.

Spruce (Picea) – another tough group, all hardy in zone 3, most spruce trees grow well over 6 feet tall. Some are smaller, such as the popular Dwarf Norway Spruce, and the Little Gem Norway Spruce. For a silver-blue globe, consider the Globe Blue Spruce, which is often available on a trunk as a Tree Form. The Columnar Blue Spruce is an attractive narrow column, and for weeping forms the Weeping Norway Spruce (which needs staking) and the beautiful The Blues Weeping Colorado Spruce are stand-outs.

Conclusion

The world of Dwarf Evergreens is a large one, and with so much to choose from there is something for everyone, whatever their taste or garden style. They give us important structural elements in our gardens, especially in smaller space – no garden is too small for a miniature tree, so start growing them in yours, because they bring so much, yet ask so little.

Evergreens for the garden - Nursery ⋆ blumgarden.ru

Unpretentious evergreen frost-resistant plants for the garden to buy inexpensively. Nursery of decorative seedlings for landscape design. Own planting material.

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Ornamental evergreen trees in the "Home and Garden" category

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Japanese Klen Florinda Japanese Maple, Acer Palmatum Mikawa-Yatsubus, 40

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Clear Rovinsky Garden Flamingo Acer Negundo Flamingo, 1.6-2m, volume : 6531942

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Japanese maple ROVINSKY GARDEN JAPANESE MOONRISE 60-70 cm volume of pot 3 l te, Code: 2633888

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False PLACK ROVINSKY Garden Acer Eskimo Synset Synset Synset Synset Synset Synset Synset Synset Synset Synset Synset Synset Synset Synset Sim Pot volume TE, Code: 6531938 9000 80cm, pot size OB, CODE: 6531931

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Japanese maple maple maple "OBNOVKA" , 1.7-2 m 15 l RG024 OB, CODE: 7415676

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OBNOVKA"

Japanese maple Florinda Japanese maple, acer palmatum Garnet, 60-80cm, pot size 3L OB, CODE: 6531934

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maple Florinda Japanese maple, acer palmatum Livy Perfect for Garden, 70-90cm, volume OB, CODE: 6531948

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Large maple of alternative ROVINSKY GARDEN FLAMINGO Acer Negundo Flamingo, 2-2.5m, volume of Gorshk TV, Code: 6531940

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online store Tvo-Shopping Japanese maple Florinda Japanese maple, acer palmatum Little Red Magical Colors, 70-90cm, volume of TV, code: 6531946 9000 Gorshk TV volume, Code: 2633392

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Japanese maple Rovinsky Japanese Maple, Aceer Palmatum Silhum CODE: 6532004 9Ol000

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Japanese maple Rovinsky Garden Japanese maple Summer Gold, 60-80cm, pot size 3L RG055 TR, CODE: 6531956

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Internet catalog Leaves, 60-80cm, TR, CODE: 6531933

maple Florinda Japanese maple, acer palmatum Inaba-shidare, 60-80cm, pot size 3L TR, CODE: 6531932

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2 400 uah

1 679.


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