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Southern Red Oak

Quercus falcata
Southern Red Oak

images/productimages/southern_red_oak_1.jpg images/productimages/southern_red_oak_3.jpg images/productimages/southern_red_oak_4.jpg
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Type
$23.95 each
Buy 4 or more $21.55 each
Buy 25 or more $20.36 each
Item # 511 - 1000052
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Shipping Information
- Shipped In Set Planting Zone for Shipping Time (Top Right)
- Cannot Ship to AK, HI, FL
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Grows in Zones 7-9 Click for Shipping Details
Plant Types/Container Sizes




Southern Red Oak Details:

Plant Facts
Mature Height
70 - 90 feet
Mature Spread
50 feet
Soil Type
Widely Adaptable
Moisture
Drought Tolerant
Mature Form
Round
Growth Rate
Moderate
Sun Exposure
Full Sun
Flower Color
Yellowish, Green Insignificant
Fall Color
Brown
Foliage Color
Dark Green
7-9

The Southern Red Oak tree, Quercus falcata, is characterized by its rough bark. The Southern red oak is also referred to as Spanish oak. Southern Red Oak trees are a medium-sized tree with a short trunk and large branches supporting a rounded crown. The bark is dark gray in color, furrowed, and is marked by rough ridges and plates. It is a tree of the Old South, ranging from Maryland to Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas.

The acorns are usually produced singly, and biennially. They are 1/2 to 3/4 inch long, roughly spherical and orange-brown. Songbirds, turkey, a variety of small mammals and deer eat the nuts.The Southern Oak tree is deciduous and is a good shade tree adapted to drier sites. The wood of the Southern Red Oak is strong and coarse-grained.

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Review it!
  StevenAlex, 9/27/2009 12:17:11 AM
Reviewer: StevenAlex
I've joined Nature Hills in order to get some trees for our new yard. We used to have a yard with over 15 kinds of trees. One was the Spanish Red Oak. It was probably my favorite. The top of the leaves are dark green, which makes the tree very rich looking. The picture here doesn't do it justice. Ours was almost perfectly round and full. It was about 25 feet tall when we bought the house and twenty-five years later about 40 feet tall. The trunk is short, but I was always able to keep a bench beneath the branches and there was plenty of standing room in the trunk area. It survived the ice storm in Tennessee. Of course, no tree looks quit the same after holding hundreds, if not thousands of pounds of ice. But it remained a wonderful, beautiful tree.

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