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Gerald L. Klingaman
(Canada Hemlock)
Canada hemlock is a graceful evergreen tree that is useful for screening, hedges or as a feature plant in the yard. Its pyramidal shape is formed by pendulous branches lined with short, dark green needles. Small brown cones are formed in late summer and can be used in craft projects.
This eastern North America native is happiest in organic, well-drained but moist soil and can be sheared to a desired size or shape. Canada hemlock is intolerant of boggy soil, pollution and drying winds. Woolly adelgid...
Jesse Saylor
(Canada Hemlock, Globosa Canada Hemlock)
Canada hemlock is a graceful evergreen tree that is useful for screening, hedges or as a feature plant in the yard. Its pyramidal shape is formed by pendulous branches lined with short, dark green needles. Small brown cones are formed in late summer and can be used in craft projects.
This eastern North America native is happiest in organic, well-drained but moist soil and can be sheared to a desired size or shape. Canada hemlock is intolerant of boggy soil, pollution and drying winds. Woolly adelgid...
Mark A. Miller
(Canada Hemlock, Huss Canada Hemlock)
Canada hemlock is a graceful evergreen tree that is useful for screening, hedges or as a feature plant in the yard. Its pyramidal shape is formed by pendulous branches lined with short, dark green needles. Small brown cones are formed in late summer and can be used in craft projects.
This eastern North America native is happiest in organic, well-drained but moist soil and can be sheared to a desired size or shape. Canada hemlock is intolerant of boggy soil, pollution and drying winds. Woolly adelgid...
James H. Schutte
(Canada Hemlock, Jeddeloh Canada Hemlock)
Canada hemlock is a graceful evergreen tree that is useful for screening, hedges or as a feature plant in the yard. Its pyramidal shape is formed by pendulous branches lined with short, dark green needles. Small brown cones are formed in late summer and can be used in craft projects.
This eastern North America native is happiest in organic, well-drained but moist soil and can be sheared to a desired size or shape. Canada hemlock is intolerant of boggy soil, pollution and drying winds. Woolly adelgid...
James H. Schutte
(Canada Hemlock, Weeping Canada Hemlock)
Canada hemlock is a graceful evergreen tree that is useful for screening, hedges or as a feature plant in the yard. Its pyramidal shape is formed by pendulous branches lined with short, dark green needles. Small brown cones are formed in late summer and can be used in craft projects.
This eastern North America native is happiest in organic, well-drained but moist soil and can be sheared to a desired size or shape. Canada hemlock is intolerant of boggy soil, pollution and drying winds. Woolly adelgid...
Gerald L. Klingaman
(Canada Hemlock, Sargent's Weeping Canada Hemlock)
Sargent's weeping hemlock is a graceful evergreen that is beautiful as a feature plant, espalier, in a grouping or next to a reflecting pond. 'Sargentii' ('Pendula' or form pendula) has a graceful spreading, pendulous shape formed by weeping branches lined with dark green needles. This cultivar was first encountered in Upstate New York around 1870. Small brown cones are formed in late summer and may be used in craft projects.
This eastern North America native is happiest in organic,...
Mark A. Miller
(Canada Hemlock, Wind's Way Canada Hemlock)
Canada hemlock is a graceful evergreen tree that is useful for screening, hedges or as a feature plant in the yard. Its pyramidal shape is formed by pendulous branches lined with short, dark green needles. Small brown cones are formed in late summer and can be used in craft projects.
This eastern North America native is happiest in organic, well-drained but moist soil and can be sheared to a desired size or shape. Canada hemlock is intolerant of boggy soil, pollution and drying winds. Woolly adelgid...
JC Raulston Arboretum at NC State University
(Carolina Hemlock)
Carolina hemlock is an evergreen, cone-bearing tree with lax, spreading branches and twigs and short,narrow flattened leaves that point in all directions, making the texture of the tree shaggy. It is very tolerant of shade, especially when young, making it a good choice to start new trees in the shade of old trees that will eventually need replacing. It is native to rocky hillsides in a small area of the Appalachians from North Carolina to Georgia, but has proven to be sturdy in other locales and...