Willow oak (Q. phellos) |
Willow Oak (Quercus phellos) is medium to large, deciduous tree, part of the "red oak" group (USDA hardiness zones 5-9). It is distinguished for willow-like oak foliage. Growth rate following a 2 year establishment period is moderate (12-16 inches annually).
Willow oak grows 50-75 feet tall and 30-35 feet wide with a rounded top or canopy. Young trees tend to be pyramidal in form. Individual specimens may reach 90 or more feet under ideal site conditions. Its small ¼ – ½ inch nearly round acorns form almost every year, are not a major maintenance headache, and serve as an important food resource for wildlife.
Long stringy yellow-green long catkin flowers appear in April, a few days before leaves emerge. Unlobed 5-inch long leaves mimic those of willow trees (Salix spp.). Leaves are tipped with a single 1-inch wide bristle. Green summer leaf color turns an undistinguished yellow-brown or dull gold very late in autumn. A young tree has a smooth grayish bark which darkens and becomes furrowed with age.
Native to the Southeastern U.S., willow oak prefers a moist bottomland, organic-rich, well-drained soil. This landscape tree tolerates light shade, but performs best in full sun. Willow oak can handle a wide range of soils including clay. Once established, it copes with summer drought well. Foliage is tolerant of urban air pollution.
narrow leaves of Willow Oak |
Willow oak demonstrates good disease and pest resistance and is a long-lived and low-maintenance tree. In a landscape willow oak fits into large sites, such as in public parks or along wide roadways and avenues with good soil mass for adequate moisture. The narrow leathery leaves abscise very late in the fall and make a great loose mulch scattered under other landscape plants.
Kingpin® - new selection of willow oak introduced by Bold Spring Nursery. It offers uniformity in street tree plantings along with these improved traits: darker leaf color, strong central leader (trunk). Kingpin is large 60 x 45 feet shade tree.
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