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wobsie

Please Recommend a Drought-Tolerant Tree for Small Yard

wobsie
15 years ago

Please recommend a tree for our small frontyard in suburban San Diego. The yard is about 50'x25', south-facing, and currently empty. We're looking for something that is drought-tolerant, and relatively small, since our house is just 1-story. I'd like something deciduous so that we have shade in the summer and sun in the winter. My spouse thinks that won't make much difference.

So far our first choice is Japanese Maple based on appearance and size. We're also thinking of Crape Myrtle, which was recommended as a good shade tree by Center for Sustainable Energy. We looked at some plum trees at a nursery today, which looked good.

I'd like to hear other recommendations. Thanks.

Comments (15)

  • dicot
    15 years ago

    Flowering members of Prunus are probably fine, but fruiting plums are messy and not that drought tolerant. Chilopsis linearis (desert willow) is nice IMO.

    {{gwi:521266}}

  • gardenguru1950
    15 years ago

    None of your three choices -- Japanese Maple, Crape Myrtle, plums -- are anything close to drought-tolerant. I am thinking that the Center for Sustainable Energy is not a California organization and is only looking at the fact that the crape myrtle is deciduous (summer cool, winter warmth).

    Here's a better start:

    Acacia baileyana Bailey Acacia

    Aesculus californica California Buckeye

    Arbutus unedo Strawberry Tree

    Celtis australis Southern Hackberry

    Cercocarpus ledifolius Curl-leaf Mahogany

    Cotinus coggygria Smoke Tree

    Eriobotrya deflexa Bronze Loquat

    Feijoa sellowiana Pineapple Guava

    Geijera parviflora Australian Willow

    Koelreuteria paniculata Goldenrain Tree

    Parkinsonia aculeata Jerusalem Thorn

    Pistacia atlantica Mount Atlas Pistache

    Pistacia chinensis Chinese Pistache

    Prunus lyonii Catalina Cherry

    Zizphus jujuba Chinese Jujube

    And it might help to know what you consider small. A "small tree" is 20-30 feet. Is that "small" enough? Could be you want a large shrub, pruned up as a single-trunked "tree" or limbed up as a multiple-trunked "tree" (some of the above).

    Joe

  • calistoga_al ca 15 usda 9
    15 years ago

    Besides being deciduous and drought tolerant, think about how you will use the area under the tree. How tolerant are you for the droppings from the tree? Will you want to grow any plants under the tree? So often it takes several years to recognize our choice of a shade tree was a mistake. Al

  • hoovb zone 9 sunset 23
    15 years ago

    Japanese Maples do better with morning sun/afternoon shade and most certainly are not drought-tolerant. In nature they are an understory tree (a small tree that grows in the shade of larger trees). The foliage gets toasted in full sun unless you are right along the ocean. They are nice in large (watered) pots on a covered patio where they get a little morning sun but shade in the hottest part of the day.

  • greenwitch
    15 years ago

    Cercidium, Palo Verde.

  • nullzero
    15 years ago

    You can go with a Loquat they get to about 10ft tall on average.

  • shadowsmom
    15 years ago

    I planted a Sambucus Mexicana (Mexican/Blue Elderberry) in my front yard in coastal South Orange County and am very happy with the result. Once established, it is drought tolerant, with white flowers in spring and small blue berries throughout the summer. Birds eat most of the berries before they hit the ground. It is deciduous and tops out at about 20 feet in height. Look for it at native plant nurseries.

    One note: It must be trained as a tree, as its natural shape is more like a shrub, so it is best to start with a small (1-gallon size) plant. Given plenty of water, mine shot up ten feet the first year I planted it, so it was easy to shape into a tree.

  • wobsie
    Original Author
    15 years ago

    Thanks to everyone for their responses. I guess we have to rule out Japanese Maple since our front yard is south-facing and gets full sun.

    We were visualizing a tree with foliage that is full and rounded, and about 5-6 feet off the ground. We don't want anything shrub-like mainly for aesthetic reasons. We'd like the tree to shade the house in the summer and allow the sun to come through in the winter.

    Below the tree, we'll have succulents and drought-tolerant plants, with much of the ground cover being pea gravel.

    I'm still looking up all the various suggested trees on the web to see what they look like... but please keep your suggestions coming! Also, if you can recommend a good nursery in the San Diego area, I'd appreciate those as well!

  • seedygirl
    15 years ago

    I'd recommend Chitalpa. It's a drought tolerant hybrid of Chilopsis, mentioned earlier, and Catalpa. Has the best of both. Long flowering season in the warm months, deciduous in the winter. Well behaved front yard tree. Crape Myrtles are fine....get a mildew resistant variety! Also, there's another, darn, can't recall atm. it's well behaved, drought tolerant, and a distant citrus relative. Used quite a bit in landscapes now. narrow, willowy leaves....it'll come to me

  • dicot
    15 years ago

    Tree of Life nursery off the 74 is one of my favorite nurseries for drought tolerant plants, 33201 Ortega Highway, San Juan Capistrano.

  • PRO
    Califia Ecodesign
    8 years ago

    It sounds like Western redbud is the way to go! Beautiful (and edible) flowers, nice fall color, a great small habit.

  • JXBrown (Sunset 24, N San Diego County)
    8 years ago

    An established crepe myrtle at my old house in inland OC received no supplemental water and was fine. I wouldn't rule it out unless you are close to the water where it may mildew. Anything that you plant will need water for the first couple of years.

    pop over to Walter Andersen's in Poway or Point Loma and have a chat with them about good choices. The western redbud might be a bit shrubby.

  • parker25mv
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    Fruiting Quince

    Pomegranate (very ornamental with its fiery orange blossoms and decoratively shaped fruits).

    kind of exotic but Yellow Cotton Tree

    citrus is fairly drought tolerant, maybe get a Satsuma Mandarin or Valencia Orange tree, or maybe a lemon tree.

  • Kim in PL (SoCal zone 10/Sunset 24)
    8 years ago

    My guess is the OP planted a tree about 7 years ago. I wonder what wobsie selected and how it is doing.