Get ready for a great harvest with this tree that features red w/gold colored fruit that is sweet yet tart and perfect for cooking, canning or eating fresh off the tree! This mid-September ripener is dependable and a great pollinator. 

This breathtaking little dwarf is perfect for small spaces and a real showstopper with clouds of pure white bloom in early May followed by an outstanding berry display in fall that starts yellow and becomes orange as the weather cools.  Easy to grow. Perfect for small spaces. Outstanding early May bloom. Colorful fall and winter, bird attracting fruit set.

This smaller more confined weeping Crabapple selection is proof that big landscape presence can come in smaller packages. Topping out at a mere 10′ with a slightly wider spread, Ruby Tears™ sports pools of luminous pink blossoms in early May backed by colorful foliage on naturally weeping, pendulous branches. While most Carbapples are prized for their bloom, foliage is just as important on this selection as it emerges as a bright merlot shade behind those pink flowers and slowly fades to rich, cool, burgundy-green for the hot summer months. Small 1/2″ bright red berries appear in late summer, sure to delight your native wildlife. Plant Ruby Tears™ in full sun and use it as a stunning, 4 season spectacular specimen in smaller places where larger plants are a real nuisance.

Litter is not a problem with this crab, developed by Melvin Bergeson of Fertile, Minnesota, as the small bright red fruit never falls. The fruit does make excellent food for wildlife. The foliage is glossy reddish-green, turning reddish-purple in fall.

Pink Lady® Apple is a cross between a Golden Delicious and a Lady Williams, and sports a pink blush over a base of pale greenish yellow. Fruit is creamy yellow, dense and juicy with a subtle aroma of pear, melon and cider. Long shelf life for these crisp fruits. Semi-dwarf and self-pollinating. Produces 3rd year fruit which are perfect fresh or used in cooking.

A colorful, unique crabapple, produces a powerful display of double rose-pink flowers in early May. This showiness is enhanced by the bountiful fall crop of orange-red fruit enjoyed by your yard’s wildlife all winter long. Compact size fits well into any landscape. Great spring color and abundant fruit. Disease resistant. Makes an excellent accent or border tree.

Disease resistance and great color are this plants calling card as masses of buds show deep red color in early May then open to an incredible array of showy single pink flowers. When flowers pass you find pleasing, deep green foliage that stands up well to the rigors of the summer weather, along with persistent deep red fruit by late summer that birds love. Add in a stellar fall foliage show of red and bright orange and you have a small tree to cherish.

Pink buds open to white flowers and pollinators will be buzzing to pollinate this nearly self-fertile apple. The fruit is ready to harvest in September and starts out as pale green, becoming a gold-green when ripe. The apple is crisp, juicy and sweet, especially nice for fresh eating, sauce and baking.

Pink Spires Crabapple is an eye-catching ornamental tree known for its small bright red fruit. The tree has flowers bloom in the spring and has glossy reddish-purple foliage. Attracts birds and wildlife as the fruit persists on the tree!

Reputed to be one of the best yellow flowering Magnolias available, ‘Sunsation’ may cause a sensation once it unfurls its bloom. Big buds swell but but take their time to open as ‘Sunsation’ is one of the later Magnolias to bloom in early to mid-May. It’s perfect timing as the late bloom avoids most chances of damage from frost and enables its blooming extravanga to completely steal the show after most of the rest of the Magnolias have finished. By the way, the flowers are definitely worth waiting for as they open to a mammoth 7″ wide in a dramatic deep yellow hue with a contrasting blush of purple at the base giving a two-toned effect that is riveting. Plant ‘Sunsation’ in half to full day sun…it’s quite easy to grow but give it space because, like all Magnolias, it’s wide and branches low to the ground.