I have a huge pecan tree in my backyard. It's a large leaf pecan and although it does produce nice elongated pecans, the squirrels eat them all gone while still green. I love the shade it gives except the tree will sap in late summer early fall for at least two months so make sure you don't plant it near the driveway like I did. Also, feed it Epsom salt (it's a mineral actually) if you want to see the tree grow faster.
What about the cedar elm? I see these all over central Texas. They are extremely hardy. Their leaves are tough and scratchy, which to me indicates that they tolerate dry conditions. The trees also grow like a single column -- a vertical trunk that works well in most planting locations. A small group of these will provide a wonderful continuous canopy. Also, what about crepe myrtles? I love seeing them in groups so that they form a wide continuous canopy. Great to be under these on a hot summer day -- the air and ground below them stays cooler.
Any tips on a tree that makes some shade without just crushing the life out of the yard? I have a shantung maple that I've been trimming but it's like a bare spot and you can watch the dirt match the shadow. If I try a shade grass then in spring and fall the leaves fall and don't protect it and it dies then. I've decided that I need to give up on the idea of a shade tree and just settle for something that provides a mix of shade and sun or much smaller trees
Okay any pointers. I live in Houston Tx, I would like a tree for shade for my front yard. Preferably something that's not messy since I take care of my own lawn 😅 and most importantly non invasive roots because of water pipe near.
Hey Leyda! I have the same problem right now, I'm looking for a tree that's not so messy, with non invasive roots. What kind of tree did you end up picking?
Why recommend an invasive Chinese pistachio when our native pecans and redbuds provide beautiful yellow foliage in autumn and bloom flowers in the spring
Which of these options I wonder is the most drought tolerant. I can't water a pecan enough to keep it alive on my land. I soaked them the day before I left on vacation and in less than two weeks when I returned they were dead. Two year planted 1" diameter trees I watered every day from day one. Only missed those two weeks. That's not a viable shade tree in my opinion. I've killed cedar elms, pecans as well as post oaks trying to get one to live on my lawn. I am considering Eucalyptus or even, god forbid... a Mesquite. Is bur oak or red oak likely to survive on a sandstone hill? Black jack oak doesn't get big enough to provide substantial shade.
You need to deep water which means have your hose on a slow drip for at least an hour, likely more depending on the size of the tree. You clearly weren't deep watering.
Crepe Myrtle trees also provide decent shade plus flower beautifuly and small plants can grow around because it's not too much shade. Oak trees are boring plus too much shade nothing grows around.
Good job Michael
I have a huge pecan tree in my backyard. It's a large leaf pecan and although it does produce nice elongated pecans, the squirrels eat them all gone while still green. I love the shade it gives except the tree will sap in late summer early fall for at least two months so make sure you don't plant it near the driveway like I did. Also, feed it Epsom salt (it's a mineral actually) if you want to see the tree grow faster.
Great Video. Thanks.
Which trees would you recommend in your backyard, but not near the pool? But, don’t want a messy tree.
What about the cedar elm? I see these all over central Texas. They are extremely hardy. Their leaves are tough and scratchy, which to me indicates that they tolerate dry conditions. The trees also grow like a single column -- a vertical trunk that works well in most planting locations. A small group of these will provide a wonderful continuous canopy. Also, what about crepe myrtles? I love seeing them in groups so that they form a wide continuous canopy. Great to be under these on a hot summer day -- the air and ground below them stays cooler.
Any tips on a tree that makes some shade without just crushing the life out of the yard? I have a shantung maple that I've been trimming but it's like a bare spot and you can watch the dirt match the shadow. If I try a shade grass then in spring and fall the leaves fall and don't protect it and it dies then. I've decided that I need to give up on the idea of a shade tree and just settle for something that provides a mix of shade and sun or much smaller trees
What about the plumbing will any of trees aggressive trees ??? I love the growth and colors are amazing
Two trees that are notorious for getting into plumbing are Willows and Bald Cypress.
Okay any pointers. I live in Houston Tx, I would like a tree for shade for my front yard. Preferably something that's not messy since I take care of my own lawn 😅 and most importantly non invasive roots because of water pipe near.
The mexican sycamore is very good but this tree needs a lot of water . Also, the live oak
Hey Leyda! I have the same problem right now, I'm looking for a tree that's not so messy, with non invasive roots. What kind of tree did you end up picking?
@@alberta1939 I haven't find one
What about the gum tree?
Native Texan master gardener wants to know is there a Texas native pistache tree and does it bear edible fruit/nuts? Thank you 😊.
No answer, huh? I was wondering the same because I know that pistachio trees grow in California groves.
Chonese Pistache is invasive. Why would you recommend that tree??
Why recommend an invasive Chinese pistachio when our native pecans and redbuds provide beautiful yellow foliage in autumn and bloom flowers in the spring
It’s not considered invasive by the USDA.
@@smithsgardentownthat’s not a good excuse
@@Somethingelse506not a good excuse for...?
@@smithsgardentownnot considered invasive in all states of US, but they are invasive to Texas, according to the Texas invasives database.
Nix Chinese pistache for Texas, invasive exotic.
Which of these options I wonder is the most drought tolerant. I can't water a pecan enough to keep it alive on my land. I soaked them the day before I left on vacation and in less than two weeks when I returned they were dead. Two year planted 1" diameter trees I watered every day from day one. Only missed those two weeks. That's not a viable shade tree in my opinion.
I've killed cedar elms, pecans as well as post oaks trying to get one to live on my lawn.
I am considering Eucalyptus or even, god forbid... a Mesquite. Is bur oak or red oak likely to survive on a sandstone hill? Black jack oak doesn't get big enough to provide substantial shade.
Do you like bald cypress? They can live in swamps and drought. Fast growing too
You need to deep water which means have your hose on a slow drip for at least an hour, likely more depending on the size of the tree. You clearly weren't deep watering.
Has anyone purposely planted a mesquite tree?
I want one 😅🤣😭 live in Houston and had them all over in Brownsville sure do miss climbing them
Crepe Myrtle trees also provide decent shade plus flower beautifuly and small plants can grow around because it's not too much shade. Oak trees are boring plus too much shade nothing grows around.
So never plant any of those near your house.