Trees for Sale

  • Illustrated red oak trees showing green and red foliage, with acorn and leaves close-up.

    Red Oak

    Usually a medium-sized tree to 35 feet tall with one or more trunks 10" in diameter, but can reach heights of 70 feet on fertile sites.

  • Illustration of a Southern live oak tree and a branch with leaves and an acorn.

    Live Oak

    A large, stately tree, commonly to 50 feet tall with a short, stout trunk of 4 feet or more in diameter, dividing into several large, twisting limbs that form a low, dense crown that can spread more than 100 feet, the limbs often touching the ground in open-grown settings.

  • Illustration of an oak tree with green leaves, a single oak leaf, and an acorn. Copyright © Robert O'Brien.

    Bur Oak

    A large tree of the prairies reaching a height of 80 feet or more and a trunk diameter of 5 feet, with a short body and heavy branches that form an open, spreading crown of dark green foliage.

  • Illustration of an oak tree with detailed leaves and an acorn beside it.

    Chinquapin Oak

    A medium or large tree reaching a height of 70 feet and a trunk to 3 feet in diameter, with a rounded crown of glossy, green foliage. It is also planted widely as a shade tree suitable for limestone soils.

  • American hornbeam tree illustration with bark and leaves

    Lacebark Elm

    A medium-sized landscape tree to 40 feet tall, with a broad, vase-shaped crown and graceful, drooping branchlets.

  • Illustration of a crape myrtle tree with pink flowers and a close-up of its flower cluster.

    Crapemyrtle

    Perhaps the most common small landscape tree or large shrub planted in Texas, crapemyrtle is usually multi-trunked with smooth, muscular limbs, grows to 20 feet tall and 15 feet wide, with mature trunks ranging from 4" to 12" in diameter.

  • Illustration of a tree with purple flowers, individual leaf, and a single purple flower spike. Copyright by Robert O'Brien.

    Vitex

    A large shrub or small landscape tree to 15 feet tall, often multi-trunked, twisted, with a spreading crown.

  • Illustration of an American sycamore tree with green foliage, accompanied by its distinctive lobed leaf and round fruit.

    Sycamore

    Considered the largest deciduous tree in North America, sycamore in Texas can exceed 100 feet in height and 4 feet in diameter, with a stout trunk and large, spreading limbs that create an oval or round, spreading crown.

General information about our trees is sourced from the Texas A&M Forest Service