This truly elegant conifer has exceptionally dark green, shiny needles that adorn the pyramidal form with dense, pendulous branching from the ground up. One of the last spruces to break bud in spring. An excellent specimen tree. Produces showy female cones that have a lovely purplish coloring before maturing to brown. Evergreen.
Bloom Time
Conifer; prized for foliage.
Deciduous/Evergreen
Evergreen
Special Features
Easy Care, Showy Fruit, Waterwise, Benefits Birds
Problems/Solutions
Deer Resistant, Rabbit Resistant
Growth Rate
Moderate
Growth Habit
Pyramidal
Landscape Use
Privacy Screen, Windbreak
Design Ideas
This is a rare dark, rich-green Spruce that is remarkably beautiful when planted in groves. As a single specimen, its purplish cones stand out like berries. Excellent choice in lawns or use columnar form to flank driveway entries or access roads. Contrast groups of dark-green Spruce with blue-tinted evergreens.
Grows easily in moist, slightly acidic, loose, sandy or gravelly loam to fine clay soils. Water deeply, regularly during first few growing seasons to establish an extensive root system; once established, tolerates drier soils. Feed with a general purpose fertilizer before new growth begins in spring.
History
This spruce is native to a large range that includes the Caucasus and Asia Minor. It was originally classified as Pinus orientalis by Carolus Linnaeus in the 18th century, but it soon became clear this was no pine . It was first introduced in 1839 by Elie Abel Carriere, 1816-1896, in his publication Revue Horticole in France. The genus Picea, classified by German botanist Fredrich Dietrich 1768-1850 includes about 35 species of cold resistant conifers distributed through temperate zones of North America and Europe.
Lore
The genus was named from the Latin for pitch, a sugar rich gum extracted from spruce trees. It was brewed into beer and even used as chewing gum by Native Americans, then settlers and was a valuable commodity in ancient Europe.
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Details
Description
This truly elegant conifer has exceptionally dark green, shiny needles that adorn the pyramidal form with dense, pendulous branching from the ground up. One of the last spruces to break bud in spring. An excellent specimen tree. Produces showy female cones that have a lovely purplish coloring before maturing to brown. Evergreen.
Bloom Time
Conifer; prized for foliage.
Deciduous/Evergreen
Evergreen
Special Features
Easy Care, Showy Fruit, Waterwise, Benefits Birds
Problems/Solutions
Deer Resistant, Rabbit Resistant
Growth Rate
Moderate
Growth Habit
Pyramidal
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Style
Landscape Use
Privacy Screen, Windbreak
Design Ideas
This is a rare dark, rich-green Spruce that is remarkably beautiful when planted in groves. As a single specimen, its purplish cones stand out like berries. Excellent choice in lawns or use columnar form to flank driveway entries or access roads. Contrast groups of dark-green Spruce with blue-tinted evergreens.
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Care
Care Instructions
Grows easily in moist, slightly acidic, loose, sandy or gravelly loam to fine clay soils. Water deeply, regularly during first few growing seasons to establish an extensive root system; once established, tolerates drier soils. Feed with a general purpose fertilizer before new growth begins in spring.
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History
History
This spruce is native to a large range that includes the Caucasus and Asia Minor. It was originally classified as Pinus orientalis by Carolus Linnaeus in the 18th century, but it soon became clear this was no pine . It was first introduced in 1839 by Elie Abel Carriere, 1816-1896, in his publication Revue Horticole in France. The genus Picea, classified by German botanist Fredrich Dietrich 1768-1850 includes about 35 species of cold resistant conifers distributed through temperate zones of North America and Europe.
Lore
The genus was named from the Latin for pitch, a sugar rich gum extracted from spruce trees. It was brewed into beer and even used as chewing gum by Native Americans, then settlers and was a valuable commodity in ancient Europe.
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About Us
We have been pioneers and craftsmen in the art of growing plants for 100 years. Since our founding in Southern California by Harry E. Rosedale, Sr. in 1926, we have been absolutely dedicated and obsessed with quality.
We have been pioneers and craftsmen in the art of growing plants for nearly 100 years. Since our founding in Southern California by Harry E. Rosedale, Sr. in 1926, we have been absolutely dedicated and obsessed with quality.