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  2. 15 Small Trees to Show Off in Your Front Yard - AOL

    www.aol.com/15-small-trees-show-off-120000700.html

    Here are fifteen options that will make your front garden stand tall. While towering evergreen trees are certainly impressive, there's a lot to appreciate in choosing small trees for your front ...

  3. How to Plant and Grow a Fraser Fir Tree for Year-Round Beauty

    www.aol.com/plant-grow-fraser-fir-tree-172042818...

    'Prostrata' This slow-growing cultivar matures into a spreading, mounded shape, 4-5 feet tall, 12-14 feet wide. Fraser Fir Companion Plants. In the wild, Fraser fir often grows with other types of ...

  4. Fraser fir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraser_fir

    Close-up view of Fraser fir foliage. Abies fraseri is a small evergreen coniferous tree typically growing between 30 and 50 ft (10 and 20 m) tall and rarely to 80 ft (20 m), with a trunk diameter of 16–20 in (41–51 cm), rarely 30 in (80 cm). The crown is conical, with straight branches either horizontal or angled upward at 40° from the ...

  5. Fir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fir

    Firs are evergreen coniferous trees belonging to the genus Abies (Latin:) in the family Pinaceae. There are approximately 48–65 [3] [4] extant species, found on mountains throughout much of North and Central America, Eurasia, and North Africa. The genus is most closely related to Keteleeria, a small genus confined to eastern Asia. [5]

  6. Abies balsamea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abies_balsamea

    The bark on young trees is smooth, grey, and with resin blisters (which tend to spray when ruptured), becoming rough and fissured or scaly on old trees. The leaves are flat and needle-like, 15 to 30 mm ( 5 ⁄ 8 to 1 + 1 ⁄ 8 in) long, dark green above often with a small patch of stomata near the tip, and two white stomatal bands below, and a ...

  7. Abies koreana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abies_koreana

    Korean fir is a very popular ornamental plant in parks and gardens in temperate climates, grown for its foliage but also for the abundant cone production even on young trees only 1–2 m (3 ft 3 in – 6 ft 7 in) tall. The following have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit: A. koreana [2] (≥ 12 m)