I enjoyed your list. I would put flamethrower somewhere higher up on the list maybe two or three. Also like to see ruby red in there somewhere otherwise very nice. Enjoy it
Hi guys! I ordered a flamethrower redbud online, but it’s just a stick without any budding, no branches, no leaves! I did cut the top to see if any sign of life, and there is some small green in the center. Any tips to help it grow, would be much appreciated!!!
Hey Andre, we can definitely provide some tips! Please submit a request through our help center, along with pictures, so we can evaluate your tree and determine what will help it the most:) customer-support.naturehills.com/support/home Thanks so much! -Whit
I want to buy a Flame Thrower Redbud Tree immediately, but I’m afraid it wouldn’t survive planting in 80 degree June temperatures here in WNY. Any advice would be greatly appreciated!
Hi there Nate, you can definitely plant a Flame Thrower Redbud right now - even in the heat! All you have to do is make sure the soil has enough moisture. They grow in hardiness zones 5-9 so you should be good as long as you're within that range. Frequent watering at the start will be needed until the plant grows new roots in your soil. Happy planting! -Whit
I have an eastern redbud on my property, that was planted over 10 years ago and I was wondering if you can help me understand why it is not prospering. It gets full sun here in East Texas (soils here are sandy loam-clay colored appearance). It is located in the center of my lawn (root ball covered by common bermuda grass) gets plenty of water (60+ inches of rain per year here) and it is budding now as it does every year but the blossoms are too few and it has many limbs that are not producing, appearing to be dead (branch extensions snap like twigs with no green or sign of life) . It does not grow and seems like it is on life support. I'd hate to lose the tree, and prefer to save it. Any tips? Can you steer me in the proper direction for caring for it? Thank you in advance! TJ
Too much sun. They can take full sun far north, but they are technically an understory tree. Move it where it can receive sone shade, or plant a shade throwing tree asap. Keep it away from the heat of the house as well.
All redbuds have edible flower buds and young seed pods. They have a mild, sweet flavor and crisp texture. Try using them as garnish, sprinkled on top of salads, or baked into cookies or cakes. - Whit
Hi there, sometimes Blue Chinese Wisteria can have a purple tinge to them. If you'd like our plant specialists to take a look at it, please visit our customer support page and submit a ticket. They'll be happy to offer some insight:) -Whit customer-support.naturehills.com/support/home
We do not sell seeds from Redbud varieties. Rising Sun must be grafted so it's more like a clone of the original plant than anything else. They will not grow true from seed. I hope this helps! -Whit
I enjoyed your list. I would put flamethrower somewhere higher up on the list maybe two or three. Also like to see ruby red in there somewhere otherwise very nice. Enjoy it
I’d put Mexican Redbud at #1 where I live. Triple digit temps all summer and sand. Toughest of them all.
Hi guys! I ordered a flamethrower redbud online, but it’s just a stick without any budding, no branches, no leaves! I did cut the top to see if any sign of life, and there is some small green in the center. Any tips to help it grow, would be much appreciated!!!
Hey Andre, we can definitely provide some tips! Please submit a request through our help center, along with pictures, so we can evaluate your tree and determine what will help it the most:) customer-support.naturehills.com/support/home Thanks so much! -Whit
I want to buy a Flame Thrower Redbud Tree immediately, but I’m afraid it wouldn’t survive planting in 80 degree June temperatures here in WNY. Any advice would be greatly appreciated!
Hi there Nate, you can definitely plant a Flame Thrower Redbud right now - even in the heat! All you have to do is make sure the soil has enough moisture. They grow in hardiness zones 5-9 so you should be good as long as you're within that range.
Frequent watering at the start will be needed until the plant grows new roots in your soil. Happy planting! -Whit
I have an eastern redbud on my property, that was planted over 10 years ago and I was wondering if you can help me understand why it is not prospering. It gets full sun here in East Texas (soils here are sandy loam-clay colored appearance). It is located in the center of my lawn (root ball covered by common bermuda grass) gets plenty of water (60+ inches of rain per year here) and it is budding now as it does every year but the blossoms are too few and it has many limbs that are not producing, appearing to be dead (branch extensions snap like twigs with no green or sign of life) . It does not grow and seems like it is on life support. I'd hate to lose the tree, and prefer to save it. Any tips? Can you steer me in the proper direction for caring for it? Thank you in advance! TJ
Too much sun. They can take full sun far north, but they are technically an understory tree. Move it where it can receive sone shade, or plant a shade throwing tree asap. Keep it away from the heat of the house as well.
Forest pansy is number 1.
Which kinds of redbud can eat
All redbuds have edible flower buds and young seed pods. They have a mild, sweet flavor and crisp texture. Try using them as garnish, sprinkled on top of salads, or baked into cookies or cakes. - Whit
❤❤❤ @@Naturehills
I bought a blue wisteria from you last year but it’s purple, not blue…did you send me the wrong plants?
Hi there, sometimes Blue Chinese Wisteria can have a purple tinge to them. If you'd like our plant specialists to take a look at it, please visit our customer support page and submit a ticket. They'll be happy to offer some insight:) -Whit customer-support.naturehills.com/support/home
Why are these called Redbud, when the buds are obviously pink?
Do you have seeds of Rising Sun Redbud tree?
We do not sell seeds from Redbud varieties. Rising Sun must be grafted so it's more like a clone of the original plant than anything else. They will not grow true from seed. I hope this helps! -Whit