Largest flower native to North America. Understory plant that can be grow in full to part shade. These bare root trees have been in full sun their entire lives.
Care Instructions: Your bare root trees will arrive packed in moist sawdust or coco coir and sealed in plastic—whenever possible, we reuse materials to stay aligned with our ecological values.
These trees can comfortably hold in that state for about 1–2 weeks as long as they’re kept within a stable temperature window—ideally between 28°F and 65°F. They may last a bit longer under those conditions, but the goal is to get them out of the plastic and into soil or proper storage as soon as you can.
A brief fluctuation outside that temperature range won’t immediately harm them, but extended exposure—especially several days above 70°F or below 28°F—can lead to stress or damage. We time our shipments carefully to avoid those extremes as much as possible.
Once your trees arrive, keep them in that same cool, stable range until you’re ready to plant or transition them into winter storage. The key here is consistency—protecting root vitality until they’re back in living soil.
Largest flower native to North America. Understory plant that can be grow in full to part shade. These bare root trees have been in full sun their entire lives.
Care Instructions: Your bare root trees will arrive packed in moist sawdust or coco coir and sealed in plastic—whenever possible, we reuse materials to stay aligned with our ecological values.
These trees can comfortably hold in that state for about 1–2 weeks as long as they’re kept within a stable temperature window—ideally between 28°F and 65°F. They may last a bit longer under those conditions, but the goal is to get them out of the plastic and into soil or proper storage as soon as you can.
A brief fluctuation outside that temperature range won’t immediately harm them, but extended exposure—especially several days above 70°F or below 28°F—can lead to stress or damage. We time our shipments carefully to avoid those extremes as much as possible.
Once your trees arrive, keep them in that same cool, stable range until you’re ready to plant or transition them into winter storage. The key here is consistency—protecting root vitality until they’re back in living soil.