Product Image
Product added to your wishlist! View wishlist
Sign in to see your saved products on any device
Product removed from your wishlist! View wishlist
Sign in to see your saved products on any device
Something went wrong. Please try again later.
Product is added to compare already. Please refresh the page.
Product is not found in compare. Please refresh the page.
5 Products already added. Please delete existing selection to add this.

Share this product

Dawn Redwood #2 Container
This product ad may change over time
Share ProductShare

Dawn Redwood #2 Container

The Dawn Redwood is perhaps one of the most interesting fast-growing trees available. It grows around 2 feet a year and it will rapidly grow to a great height, eventually reaching 70 to 100 feet tall, with a spread of perhaps 25 feet across. It is a needle-tree, like spruce or pine, but unlike them it loses its leaves during the winter, so it will not throw the hea…
The Dawn Redwood is perhaps one of the most interesting fast-growing trees available. It grows around 2 feet a year and it will rapidly grow to a great height, eventually reaching 70 to 100 feet tall, with a spread of perhaps 25 feet across. It is a needle-tree, like spruce or pine, but unlike them it loses its leaves during the winter, so it will not throw the heavy winter shade that can be a problem with evergreen trees. It grows from zone 5 to zone 8 in most soils, preferring damp soil but tolerating both flooding and some drought. It has no significant pests and makes a beautiful addition to the garden as a specimen tree or a screening tree. It looks very effective by water and in damp soil where many other trees will not do well.
See more below
T
The Tree Center
$79.50
Visit site

Description

The Dawn Redwood is perhaps one of the most interesting fast-growing trees available. It grows around 2 feet a year and it will rapidly grow to a great height, eventually reaching 70 to 100 feet tall, with a spread of perhaps 25 feet across. It is a needle-tree, like spruce or pine, but unlike them it loses its leaves during the winter, so it will not throw the heavy winter shade that can be a problem with evergreen trees. It grows from zone 5 to zone 8 in most soils, preferring damp soil but tolerating both flooding and some drought. It has no significant pests and makes a beautiful addition to the garden as a specimen tree or a screening tree. It looks very effective by water and in damp soil where many other trees will not do well.