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March, 2025

URBAN FOREST NURSERY, INC.

Q1 NEWSLETTER

Dear Ann


Below is the link to our latest inventory. We will send updates monthly to ensure our customers always have current information on our availability.

INVENTORY
It's that time again for the Skagit Valley Tulip Festival! We're all excited that spring and the tulip festival are both fast approaching. With that brings lots of visitors to the area that may block or interfere with local traffic. So, in preparation, our driveways have been blocked off with cones and barricades. 
If you are scheduled for a tree pick-up any time during the month of April please call us at (360) 428-5810 / (360) 707-8754 as you arrive in Mount Vernon so we can move the barricades to allow entrance for your vehicle.

Thank you in advance for your patience.

Nursery News

Why You Should Buy Our “Root Ready” Trees

-Grown in the ground in fabric grow bags, our trees have the most prolific and dense root system per square inch of root ball. 


-Tree establishment and growth are faster and more successful because of the above.


-Most are “Root Ready” to plant with few if any circling roots.


-Most of our trees have branch structure that starts around 5 feet above grade, so corrective pruning is minimal.


-Trees are continually pruned to maintain a single leader and even branching.


-Root-balls in fabric grow bags are relatively smaller so you can ship more at a time.


-Grow bag root balls are easier to lift, move about, and plant without using heavy equipment.


-Fabric grow bag rootballs are more solid, and can be stored more successfully for longer periods before planting.


-Digging and preparing fabric grow bag grown trees for customers is relatively faster than B&B dug trees so time between your request to pickup is shorter.


Featured Tree

Ginkgo biloba

‘Goldspire™’, ‘Grindstone’, and ‘Sky Tower™’


Personally, the Ginkgo tree has always been one of my favorite trees, but frustratingly slow to grow. Urban Foresters were always warned to plant only the male, as the smell of the female fruit can be so disgusting. The industry directs us to grow only male cultivars to avoid the fruit. However, from research and my own experience, males periodically have the ability to send out a limb that produces fruit. I personally have witnessed Princeton Sentry Ginkgo cultivars, in our nursery, at the Morton Arboretum, and other locations, all presumably confirmed male clones, but with an occasional fruit. Remember the great line in the Jurassic Park movie, “Nature finds a way”. It is no wonder that Ginkgo trees have survived for millions of years.


While growing many common Ginkgo male cultivars, including Princeton Sentry, Autumn Gold, Golden Colonnade®, Magyar, Presidential Gold®, and others, we have not always seen the uniformity that we expect and see in other species cultivars. Although Presidential Gold® has been the most promising of this group. Is it possible that they lack a strong gene trait to influence the characteristics of these selections, or is the original morphology of the seedling Ginkgo so strong that the tree is trying to grow back to its original self?


In recent years we have come across other cultivars that show more uniformity of form and structure, specifically ‘Goldspire™’, ‘Grindstone’, and ‘Sky Tower™’ (possibly all the same tree as the literature is confusing). These appear to have the most reliable branch structure for any ginkgo that I have seen, such as branches evenly spaced along a central leader all the way up the stem. Frankly, I was blown away when I first saw these three, compared to other cultivars we have grown,but their ultimate mature size is still in question. The ‘Grindstone’ is a very tall tree, as so well illustrated in an online video. However, the ‘Goldspire™’ is listed to mature at anywhere from 15 to 45 feet. And ‘Sky Tower™’ is said to mature at 15 to 20 feet. Most important is our observation of the evenly space branch structure and more reliable form on these “three” cultivars.

Ginkgos can be frustratingly slow to grow, but the ultimate size may not matter to some. In youth, they have to be staked, as their trunk can be like rubber, and early careful pruning will pay off in its ultimate form. They have a fat, fleshy, prolific root system and transplant well but may take a couple of years to become established. Have patience,they respond well to high nitrogen and regular limestone applications and appear to prefer to grow better in the heat.

As climate changes and new insect and diseases challenges appear, I doubt there will be a better choice than planting a Ginkgo in almost any location.


If you have any comments on the Ginkgo biloba, please let me know!


Jim Barborinas, ISA #PN-0135, ASCA Reg. # 356. TRAQ Qualified
Urban Forest Nursery, Inc.
Urban Forestry Services|Bartlett Consulting
Mount Vernon, Washington

2025 Available Inventory

Click below to see our latest inventory list. We will be updating it soon and will send out monthly emails to ensure our customers always have the most current information on our availability.

INVENTORY
As always, we invite our customers to come check out our production facility in Mount Vernon, WA, including our new RFID Inventory system.  Give us a call and set up your appointment today!

Urban Forest Nursery, Inc.

15119 McLean Road, Mount Vernon, WA 98273

Office (360)428-5810 Fax (360)428-1822

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