Filter
Sort
Sort
Sort By :
By :
Grid View
List View
- Stately and uncommon
- Adequate moisture required
- Underutilized
- No longer recommended
Smooth Strongbark
- Ideal for smaller spaces
- Not recommended
- Formal appearance
- Requires protection from strong winds
- Unique and prized
- Attractive blue-green to silver leaflets
- Prolific fruiter
- Extremely popular
- Colorful older leaves
- Beautiful pinwheel flowers, often multicolored
- Recently classified invasive
- Dense canopy
- Falls over easily, may require staking
- Majestic
- Colorful new leafs
- Fruit eaten by birds
- Self-shedding fronds
- Stout, swollen trunk
- Delicious edible fruit
- Prominant gray-olive crownshaft
- Prominent blue-gray crownshaft
- Unique, stout pineapple-like trunk when young
- Attracts butterflies
False Tamarind
- Very showy bright yellow flowers
- Slender trunk, 4" in diameter
- Relatively uncommon in South Florida
- Native
Common Hoptree
- Massive stature
- Prominant olive crownshaft, slightly buldging
- Long-lasting year-round blooms
Stiff Cornel
- Rapid growth
- Stout, swollen trunk
- Will not tolerate frost
- Unique, fern-like leaves
- Attractive variegated foliage
- Available multi-stalked
- Attractive silver-gray foliage
- Stunning
- Unique purple-brown crownshaft
- Distinctive-looking fruit with spiked exterior
- Attractive dark green leaves
- Formal appearance
- Classic Southern tree
- Unique flowers, with petals like banana peels
Florida Swampprivet
- Pyramidal crown
- Excellent small hedge
- Killed by citrus greening (HLB)
Neverwet
- Ringed trunk
- Colorful fall foliage
- Ideal with Mediterranean architecture
- Adequate moisture required
- Distinctive-looking fruit with spiked exterior

