Five alternatives to some of our commonly used and overused woody landscape plants include:
- Aesculus flava (octandra) Yellow Buckeye is a beautiful North American buckeye that develops an upright oval crown maturing
to about 50 feet tall. The darker green leaves turn a pumpkin orange in the fall. The yellow flowers appear in May in six to eight inch panicles followed by fruit. It prefers a deeper, moist, well-drained soil and adapts to our alkaline soil. - Crataegus x lavallei Lavalle Hawthorn is a hybrid between Crataegus mexicana and Crata
egus crusgalli.It has a dense, oval to roundedcrown growing to about 15-20 feet in height and about two thirds as wide. The glossy green simple leaves turn yellow to copper-red in the fall. Clusters of white flowers appear in May into June followed by red to orange-red fruit that persists into winter. The stems usually do not have thorns. - Maackia amurensis Amur Maackia develops into a round-headed tree maturing to 20-25 feet tall and about the s
ame width. The bark isolive-brown and peels at maturity. Unfolding leaves are silvery-green then turn medium green. The fragrant flowers are white, blooming June to July followed by green to brown pod fruit. - Quercus muehlenbergii Chinkapin Oak or Yellow Chestnut Oak matures to about 45 feet tall a
nd can spread wider. Leaves turn reddish-rust in the fall. The acorn fruit is one inch in length and matures the first season. - Pyrus calleryana ‘Whitehouse’ Whitehouse Callery Pear develops a columnar-pyramidalform with a strong central leader and upward archin
g branches. The leaves are a glossy green, long pointed and narrower than other clones of Callery Pear. Leaves turn reddish-purple earlier in the fall than other clones. The white flowers are a little later than other clones of Callery Pear.
These plants and many more can be viewed throughout the year during daylight hours at the P
lant Environmental Research Center and Center Avenue site on the Colorado State University campus in Fort Collins. Visit www.woodyplants.colostate.edu for more information.
For more information, see the following Planttalk Colorado™ video(s).


