Bur Oak

Bur Oaks are an exceptionally long lived tree that with time can reach truly massive proportions. They are an excellent selection for making a statement or as a shade tree with some authority. Bur Oaks are best suited for large open spaces. They are the most cold tolerant of all the oaks. When young, they are known to have a corky bark and branches. Their large acorns are prized by wildlife and are quickly carried off by birds and small mammals. When you plant a Bur Oak tree, you are really planting a tree for future generations.

Brandon Elm

The Brandon Elm is a selection of the native American Elm that grows on the eastern prairies. It was chosen for it’s consistent upright vase form, dense ascending branch structure and being considerably more compact. The leaves are dark green with a serrated margins and turn a golden yellow in the fall. The tree can be trained to have a raised lower branches which makes it suitable for locations with visibility and clearance concerns. Brandon Elms are hardy, drought and urban tolerant. The tree is highly versatile and widely planted for good reason.

Box Elder

The Box Elder is a native tree that can often be found growing along streams and rivers. Some folks may know this tree as a Manitoba Maple. The tree is exceptionally drought and cold tolerant. A Box Elder can thrive in the most unforgiving location. Displaying plenty of character they often grow with gnarled and twisted branches. As the wood is weak and females will drop samaras, the Box Elder is best suited as a shade tree in a large yard or as a shelter belt tree in a rural setting.

Spring Snow Crabapple

The Spring Snow Crabapple blooms in early to mid-spring with a profusion of beautiful, highly fragrant white flowers that make the tree look as though it has been covered in fresh snow. This compact tree is fully hardy for our region and, being a fruitless cultivar, remains clean and tidy throughout the season. It features distinctive orange-tinged bark and dark green, pointed leaves that turn yellow in fall, and when in bloom it is excellent for attracting hummingbirds and honey bees.

Bailey Select Sherbert Chokecherry

The Bailey Select Sherbert Chokecherry is a cultivated selection of the same chokecherry that grows wild in our region, with foliage that emerges green in spring and turns a rich purple by mid-summer. In spring, the tree produces a beautiful display of white, wonderfully fragrant panicles, followed by large crops of astringent black cherries that are mostly enjoyed by foraging birds. True to tradition, the fruit can also be used to make delicious chokecherry jam, just like in the old days.

Toba Hawthorne

The Toba Hawthorne is hardy and compact ornamental tree that displays double white flowers that slowly turn to pink. The flowers are followed by small pomes that ripen to red in the fall. These pomes can be made into jellies or used in tea. The tree grows with bright glossy leaves that turn yellow. As the tree matures it develops a sinewy trunk full of furrows and twists.

Littleleaf Linden

The Littleleaf Linden is a beautiful, highly ornamental tree that adds appeal to any outdoor space, growing with a strong central leader, dense branching, and a trunk that develops substantial girth over time. As its name suggests, its leaves are smaller than those of other linden species, heart shaped and dark green, and in early summer the tree bursts into bloom with clusters of exceptionally fragrant yellow flowers. These nectar-rich flowers attract hummingbirds, bees, and butterflies, and the species also produces a distinctive leaf-like structure called a bract, which evolved to protect the flowers and the small nutlets that develop and ripen in late summer.

Nobility White Ash

The Nobility White Ash is a seedless selection of the American Ash with an excellent oval form and an orderly branch structure, noted for its well-mannered growth habits that require little pruning or training. With the right fall frosts, it develops deep purple fall color, and it is a very hardy tree that tolerates adverse urban planting conditions with minimal fuss.

Ponderosa Pine

The Ponderosa Pine is a large evergreen well suited to our region, valued for its exceptional drought tolerance and its ability to provide year-round green in a variety of garden settings. It produces soft, bushy clusters of very long pine needles, typically in bundles of three and sometimes two, and as it matures it develops distinctive plates of exfoliating orange bark that many people say smell like butterscotch mixed with vanilla. The tree bears quite large pine cones armed with notably sharp spines, and it grows symmetrically with a strong central leader when young before gradually maturing into a more open, rounded form with age. Highly versatile, the Ponderosa Pine can be planted as an accent, for shade, or as part of a shelter belt, and it is native to much of western North America.

Common Purple Lilac

The Common Purple Lilac has for generations been cherished by gardeners for it’s fragrant purple blossoms and its ability to create a lush green wall. Technically a multi-stemmed shrub, this Lilac grows vigorously and flowers in late spring. Their conical clusters of florets have a tube-shaped base with four spreading petal lobes. The leaves are smooth, dark green, heart shaped and bud out prior to the flowers. The Common Purple Lilac is quite hardy, deer resistant and requires very little care. They are excellent for hedges along the border of a property line or as a windbreak but can also be planted as a single specimen.

Prairie Dream Birch

The Prairie Dream Birch is a paper birch with beautiful fair white bark and attractive green leaves. With time the bark on the lower trunk peels into neat little rolls that are a favourite for youngsters. The leaves are pointy and dark green with a doubly serrated margin. They turn a golden yellow in fall. This cultivar is low maintenance and more adaptable than other varieties of birch. The Prairie Dream Birch has demonstrated exceptional resilience to the the birch bark borer.

Ivory Silk Lilac Tree

The Ivory Silk Lilac Tree is a top contender for favourite ornamental trees. In late spring to early summer the tree displays long upright panicles of creamy white flowers. Some would say this lilac's fragrance is reminiscent of privet. The flowers transition to loose clusters of brown seed capsules that will persist into winter. The leaves are dark green and lanceolate shaped. The Ivory Silk grows with an attractive reddish brown bark. Fitting for smaller yards, the tree is petite in stature. The tree is reliably cold hardy and has very little pest issues.  

Top Gun Bur Oak

The Top Gun is cultivar of the Bur Oak with a smaller and morecolumnar form that grows with a strong central  leader. All Bur Oaks grows with a distinctive gnarled appearance. When young the bark of Top Gun tends to be much more silvery than the native selection. The underside of the leaves also tend to have a silvery / grey appearance. Their large acorns are prized by wildlife and are quickly carried off by birds and small mammals. When you plant a Top Gun Bur Oak tree, you are really planting a tree for future generations.

Snowbird Hawthorn

The Snowbird Hawthorn is hardy and compact ornamental tree that displays double white flowers. The flowers  are followed by small pomes that ripen to red in the fall. These pomes can be made into jellies or used in tea. The tree grows with bright glossy leaves that turn yellow. As the tree matures it develops a sinewy trunk full of furrows and twists.

Chickadee Birch

The Chickadee Birch is a beautiful tree that was derived from the Paper Birch. The tree adapts a tidy pyramidal form making it ideal for smaller spaces. The Chickadee Birch grows with dense dark green leaves. Typical of the birch species, these leaves are small, pointed and have serrated margins. The leaves turn to golden yellow in autumn and slowly shed, reviling it’s inner white bark. This cultivar has shown increased resilience to the bronze birch borer beetle.