Meyer Lemon Tree
The Meyer Lemon is the best indoor citrus performer and its popularity is evidence of this! This little tree can provide flowers and fruit up to 4 ...
View full detailsFree Shipping on Orders $119+
The Meyer Lemon is the best indoor citrus performer and its popularity is evidence of this! This little tree can provide flowers and fruit up to 4 ...
View full detailsYou will love growing your own dwarf Key Lime Tree. Make pies, limeade, and share with friends and family. These limes pack a delicious sweet and t...
View full detailsIntroduction Grow Your Own Delicious Bananas Dwarf fruit plant that grows in pots Self-pollinating – you only need 1 plant! Healthy fruit – rich i...
View full detailsLoaded with calcium, magnesium, potassium, and fiber, figs are definitely a superfood! The Little Miss Figgy Fig tree makes it super simple to grow...
View full detailsHow about some nice brown sugar sweet figs right in your own backyard? The Brown Turkey Fig Tree is one of the sweetest fig tree varieties out ther...
View full detailsIntroduction Cold Hardy Fig - Can grow in very cold climates! High fruit yields Plump, delicious figs Withstands colder climates down to zone 5! E...
View full detailsGrow loquat fruit in your own backyard! The loquat tree is an evergreen tree that has attractive orange fruit. These tropical fruit trees bloom in ...
View full detailsOriginating in East Asia, the Pomegranate Tree has spread throughout the United States. You could easily find this popular fruit tree growing both ...
View full detailsGrowing Possum Purple Passion Fruit is surprisingly easy. This vigorous tropical fruit vine is a heavy bloomer. The flowers are breathtaking and ex...
View full detailsRemember the lyrics to this popular nursery rhyme?: “All around the mulberry bush…”: Well, now you can hum this popular tune while you pick delicio...
View full detailsThe densely foliated canopies of Glenn Mango Trees are reminiscent of sprawling fruit orchards in southern Florida–full and colorful, with a gentle...
View full detailsThree gallon plants have a root ball around 10 or 11 inches. These shrubs are usually 1 to 3 feet tall and 1 to 2 feet wide, but this varies depending on the type and variety of plant. Low growing spreading plants tend to be shorter and wider. While upright shrubs and trees tend to be taller, but more narrow. Flowering bushes like azaleas will be rounded and as tall as they are wide. Dwarf plants tend to be on the smaller side because they grow slower above ground and to a smaller mature size.
Three Gallon shrubs are more mature than 1 gallon bushes, often by a couple of years or more. These plants have a more developed root system and sturdier thicker trunks and branches. 3 gallon bushes can be almost twice the size of the same plant in a 1 gallon pot so you get quicker color and impact than you do with smaller plants.
A 3 gallon plant pot is going to be between 10 and 12 inches wide and tall. 3 gallon planters tend to be about the same height and width, but it does vary with the pot style.
You should plant most of our bushes and trees in the ground for the best results. But for plants that grow well in pots, like dwarf citrus trees, houseplants, Japanese Maples, Drift Roses, and Knock Out Rose Trees, up-pot to a container no more than twice the size of the current pot. We recommend a plant container size around 5 gallons. This means the pot you choose will be around 12 to 14 inches.
We carry 1 gallon, 2 gallon, and 3 gallon nursery pot sizes in shrubs, plants, and trees. Our larger trees come in 3, 5 or 7 gallon pots, but these are usually categorized by height. On occasion we carry small specialty perennials in quart pots.
Be sure to browse our online plant nursery for additional options!
You May Also Like: