In Maryland, between DC and Annapolis. Zone 7b. Soil is between 6 and 6.5pH. Location: West side of house. I have a dead Japanese maple (arborist guesses the roots choked themselves) and am looking to rip it out and plant another tree. Mainly looking for 1) a pretty tree and 2) some energy savings from shade on the house in the afternoons and evenings.
So far I have looked at dogwoods and serviceberries which seem to only top out at 25'. At maturity they might provide some shade but I have a 2 story house so the benefit might be minimal... though I'm open to opposing opinions if there are any? Sourwood similarly seem like it might be too small (30' from what I'm reading) unless any of these trees are capable of growing taller in our Maryland soil?
Considered elms but while there are improved varieties resistant to Dutch Elm it seems that Elm Yellows are still an issue. Then Lindens came up, but several sites said that American Lindens are fairly susceptible to strong storms -- which concerns me because I have three white pines on the North side of my house and they shed branches with regularity in the face of stiff winds. Little leaf Lindens had mixed reviews, some sites saying they are susceptible and some saying they are fine... not sure what to believe.
Kentucky Coffeetree was also considered but I think it's too slow growing for my taste.
Thought that yellowwood might be a great option for a while, but then I read that they are also susceptible to storms. We get those with regularity here (and in fact a neighbor two doors down just had a large maple fall on their house last week, so I'm sensitive to that right now).
That leaves a couple options for me: Gingko (though it seems too slow growing for me), Sweetly Magnolia (though some sources say it goes up to 30-50 feet, while others say it tops out at 20), or some sort of maple cultivar such as Red Sunset. I'm also reading that chokecherries can grow up to 40' (there's a 74' specimen here in Maryland).
Any thoughts from you guys?
So far I have looked at dogwoods and serviceberries which seem to only top out at 25'. At maturity they might provide some shade but I have a 2 story house so the benefit might be minimal... though I'm open to opposing opinions if there are any? Sourwood similarly seem like it might be too small (30' from what I'm reading) unless any of these trees are capable of growing taller in our Maryland soil?
Considered elms but while there are improved varieties resistant to Dutch Elm it seems that Elm Yellows are still an issue. Then Lindens came up, but several sites said that American Lindens are fairly susceptible to strong storms -- which concerns me because I have three white pines on the North side of my house and they shed branches with regularity in the face of stiff winds. Little leaf Lindens had mixed reviews, some sites saying they are susceptible and some saying they are fine... not sure what to believe.
Kentucky Coffeetree was also considered but I think it's too slow growing for my taste.
Thought that yellowwood might be a great option for a while, but then I read that they are also susceptible to storms. We get those with regularity here (and in fact a neighbor two doors down just had a large maple fall on their house last week, so I'm sensitive to that right now).
That leaves a couple options for me: Gingko (though it seems too slow growing for me), Sweetly Magnolia (though some sources say it goes up to 30-50 feet, while others say it tops out at 20), or some sort of maple cultivar such as Red Sunset. I'm also reading that chokecherries can grow up to 40' (there's a 74' specimen here in Maryland).
Any thoughts from you guys?