Olea europaea – Smooth Multi Stems
Familiar with its grey leaves, gnarly trunk and essence of hotter climes. As with most plants – the bigger, the hardier they are.
Hardiness level Amber
Familiar with its grey leaves, gnarly trunk and essence of hotter climes. As with most plants – the bigger, the hardier they are.
Hardiness level Amber
Known as the Chinese White Pine from western and central China where this tree was regarded as a symbol of longevity. This beautiful tree was discovered by Pere Armand David in the Chinese province of Shensi in 1873 and trees cultivated from the seeds he sent back.
A hardy evergreen tree with pretty, glossy leaves that are deeply green and wavy-edged.
Hardiness level Green
An excellent evergreen shrub or small tree and hardy across the whole of the UK, so you won’t struggle to accommodate one, or indeed a few of these.
Hardiness level Green
Dense-leaved evergreen shrub with pretty, glossy tooth-edged foliage and scented flowers in autumn. The foliage of these shrubs is indeed dense, which gives them a solidity of form that we love. But they are also delicately-textured and there’s a softness to them that belies their hardiness.
Hardiness level Amber
A lustrously- glossy evergreen tree originating in Japan. The ‘x’ means it’s a hybrid of two other Oamanthusses: brace yourself for some taxonomy or skip over the next bit and just know that it’s a truly majestic creature.
Hardiness level Amber
Size matters: for instant visual heft and a decent bit of height we have these super multi-stemmed specimens of Common Bay. Carefully pruned and trained over many years to create a plant with multiple strong stems and a good thick thatch of aromatic leaves.
Hardiness level Amber
A native European tree, more often seen clipped as a hedge and as topiary. The foliage is toxic to many browsing animals (cattle, horses and sheep) and so in rural areas, you’ll only see this growing in church yards, gardens and some native stands of pure yew forest like the wonderfully ancient and slightly spooky Kingley Vale near Chichester in West Sussex.
Hardiness level Green
You cannot beat a Pittosporum for adding texture to any garden: and for a properly shrubby shrub you could pick any of them. However the multi-stemmed form of ‘Elizabeth’ has a subtle strength to its architecture that we feel is a glorious balance between cloudy volume and vaulted structure.
Hardiness level Amber
A clever idea from Italy – a bush grafted onto a trunk producing a tidy little evergreen tree with new growth that’s red and frothy with white flowers in May.
Hardiness level Green