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Plants Matching salix babylonica

Returned 5 results. Page 1 of 0.

Image of Salix babylonica photo by: Gerald L. Klingaman

Gerald L. Klingaman

(Babylon Weeping Willow, Weeping Willow)

This elegant weeping waterside tree is a classic for open majestic landscapes with ponds or moist lowlands. The Babylon weeping willow is an upright but weeping, fast-growing, deciduous tree native to eastern Asia. Though deciduous, it is beautiful year-round because of its elegant weeping branches that are pretty and interesting with leaves or without.

The yellow-green branches are long and pendulous. In early to mid-spring they bear soft, inconspicuous yellow-green catkins. Just afterward, long...

(Peking Willow)

This elegant weeping waterside tree is a classic for open majestic landscapes with ponds or moist lowlands. The Babylon weeping willow is an upright but weeping, fast-growing, deciduous tree native to eastern Asia. Though deciduous, it is beautiful year-round because of its elegant weeping branches that are pretty and interesting with leaves or without.

The yellow-green branches are long and pendulous. In early to mid-spring they bear soft, inconspicuous yellow-green catkins. Just afterward, long...

(Peking Willow)

Despite a link between ‘Navajo’ and ancestors on the Navajo Reservation in New Mexico, the parent species is an exotic that just happens to love the American Southwest. It originates in China where it is closely related to the weeping willow, bearing most of its characteristics except the weeping form. This cultivar was named for a specific group of trees planted by the earliest colonials, possibly from Spain. It is an upright, fine-branching, deciduous tree with a globe-shaped canopy. The yellow-green...

(Peking Willow)

Globe willow grows quickly to form a medium-sized tree with a dense, rounded, somewhat umbrella-shaped crown. Its upright limbs bear small, pendulous branchlets lined with narrow, bright green, slightly twisted leaves which take on pleasing yellow tones in autumn. Small, yellow-green flower clusters emerge simultaneously with the bright green spring foliage. This cultivar is synonymous with the variety Salix matsudana ‘Umbraculifera’.

Preferring full sun, this willow is easy to grow...

Image of Salix babylonica f. tortuosa photo by: James H. Schutte

James H. Schutte

(Corkscrew Willow)

The twisted curly branches of this pretty weeping waterside tree add interest to the landscape and can be cut and added to floral arrangements. The contorted weeping willow is a classic for open landscapes with ponds or moist lowlands. It is an upright but weeping, fast-growing, deciduous tree native to eastern Asia. Though deciduous, it is beautiful year-round because of its elegant weeping branches that are pretty and interesting with leaves or without.

The curly branches are long, pendulous...