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Baldcypress - Urban Tree of the Year

Picked the Most Popular City Tree to Plant

By Steve Nix, About.com

Baldcypress has been selected Urban Tree of the Year for 2007 as determined by responses to an annual online survey sponsored by arborist magazine City Trees . This magazine serves as the official Journal to The Society of Municipal Arborists (SMA) and readers select a new tree each year.

Testimony after testimony from urban foresters and park administrators support the up and coming bald cypress as the latest trend in selecting the best landscaping tree for many locations. Lawns, parks and street right-of-ways are growing baldcypress in profusion.

Common baldcypress is an evergreen but acts deciduous as it drops its twiggy leaves in the fall. You can call it a "deciduous" conifer. The rich green color of the needles turn to "copper" orange then to brown and makes for one of autumn's best colors just before twig and needle fall.

In wet soil conditions, the bald cypress will form sections of root growing above ground to gather oxygen. These knobby "cypress knees" can occur 10' to 15' beyond the spread of the plant. Cypress knees do not generally form on drier sites.

Cities from Charlotte, NC, Dallas, TX to Tampa, FL currently use it as a street tree and it should be used more extensively throughout its range in urban landscapes according to most landscape professionals. Baldcypress can be clipped into a formal hedge, creating a wonderful soft screen or hedge.

Bald cypress trees grow best when they have their own space and can potentially grow up to 2' per year. Bald cypress require sun (at least 1/2 day). They make a great screen when planted in groups and can be planted within 15' of a house.

Art Plotnik, The Uban Tree Book, says "as a street tree, the baldcypress is getting rave recommendations and increasing use. Tree professionals of New Orleans, Charlotte, Tampa and Dallas are among others that put it on the streets." Ralph Sievert, Minneapolis MN Urban Forester who is respected as the “Johnny Appleseed” of baldcypress, recommends it highly in his state and outside of the southern United States.

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