News

Japanese Tree Lilac is easily grown in average, medium, well-drained soil in full sun. It prefers rich, moist, slightly acidic to slightly alkaline soils but is tolerant of urban conditions ...
Hardy from Zones 3 to 7, this tree is suited for use throughout the Midwest, even though it is native to Japan. Tolerant of clay soils and a range of soil pH from 6.5 to 8.0, Japanese tree lilac ...
The Japanese lilac tree was a stunning choice, horticulture club president Quinn Mathisen said. It can grow to be 20-25 feet tall and 15-20 feet wide and will bloom with creamy white blossoms in ...
Japanese Tree Lilac is one of the easier flowering trees to grow, and it may just be that it is not old enough yet to flower every year. Soil type or pH is not usually an issue; Japanese Tree ...
We planted this tree 14 years ago when we built our house. It has done very well, even bloomed this year. Now all of sudden it has started to die. I have three other bushes in the area,and they ...
The Japanese lilac trees, on both the east and west lawns, are mid-size trees and have a moderate growth rate. Clusters of white flowers bloom in the early summer.
Student volunteers from the Shamokin Area High School braved the conditions to plant 13 Japanese lilac trees and seven Red maple trees at the boulevard on Market Street.