Privacy Trees

5 Best Trees For Privacy To Grow In Colorado

There is no such thing as too much love for your neighbors-privacy must be respected in the backyard! There’s no point in having everyone all up in your business when this is your space to live, play, and relax.

Trees are one of the most effective ways of creating privacy. The purpose of this article is to introduce you to some of Colorado’s best trees for privacy. It is amazing how trees buffer the environment around you so that you can have a quiet, private oasis.

Our team of professionals understands what it takes to make your landscaping dreams come true. Over the years, we’ve completed more than 1,000 landscaping projects in Greeley, Longmont, Boulder, and everywhere in between. If you are searching for Northern Colorado landscapers, we can help.

What are the benefits of trees over hardscaping for creating privacy barriers? For one thing, high fencing might not be allowed by your HOA, so you’re going to want to find out what is allowed from there.

Our recommendation is to use evergreen trees and bushes due to the fact that they create a barrier that stays green throughout the year and that doesn’t go away when the seasons change.

Secondly, let’s get to the million-dollar question: which trees provide the best privacy and also grow fast in Colorado? This is one of the advantages of hardscaping, which can be installed in a matter of hours or days. Trees, on the other hand, require more time.

It should also be noted that you can buy trees and shrubs in almost any size and height that your budget allows. In the event that you have more time, you could purchase the most affordable barrier for you now, and then you would have a nearly maintenance-free, permanent barrier in a few years.

Castle Wall® Blue Holly

There are two types of Castle Wall® Holly: broadleaf and evergreen. You could use it to make an outstanding foundation plant, or you could pair it with a female Holly for a pleasing combination.

It should be noted that the Castle Wall® Holly (Ilex x meserveae ‘Heckenstar’ PP14,308) is a Proven Winners Selection plant, and carries the distinction for its outstanding foliage and hardiness.

This is a newer variety of Holly with more compact leaves, better branching, and it is also capable of pollinating well.

Because of the coloration of the foliage, it is often referred to as a “Blue Holly” when its foliage has the classic serrated, Holly-leaf shape.

In the past, Holly has commonly been used in holiday arrangements, and just one of these plants should be enough to pollinate several female Holly plants (if you wish to have the traditional red berries as well).


Spring Snow Crabapple

If you are looking for a beautiful, fruitless flowering crabapple, your search is over.

The Spring Snow Crabapple (Malus Spring Snow) blooms with stunning fragrant white flowers during spring.

This plant is covered in flowers all the way to the tip of its branches. There are so many bright white blooms on this plant!

Spring Snow is a breakthrough crabapple variety that produces no fruit at all.

There’s no need to worry about messes on your patio, courtyard, driveway, or sidewalk.

With this tree, you’ll enjoy it year-round. The Spring Snow Crabapple has a classic upright oval form that is crisp, clean, and clean-cut. This tree can be used in many different ways in a landscape.

Eventually, the tree will have shiny, bright green leaves after the white spring blooms are done. Its shade will be refreshing all summer.


Columnar Blue Spruce

It just so happens that you fell in love with the idea of having a Spruce tree in your landscape, and why wouldn’t you?

Spruce trees are some of the most beautiful evergreens in the world, due to their steely-blue colored needles and their beautiful, fresh flowers.

However, Colorado Spruce requires a lot of commitment on your part. As such, it has the potential to grow very large and wide.

There is something unique about this variety. The plant grows tall enough to make an impression, while remaining narrow enough to fit anywhere.

A selection of a native tree, the Columnar Blue Spruce (Picea pungens var. glauca ‘Fastigiata’) was selected for its narrow, upright habit.


Among the best-looking evergreen accent trees, the Colorado Blue Spruce is one of the tallest, so not everyone can accommodate the soaring height of this tree.

As a wonderful choice for smaller yards, the compact Blue Spruce Baker’s (Picea pungens Bakeri’) is an excellent choice.

There are many people who would like to have a Blue Spruce in their yard, and this improved variety would be a great choice.

This product will provide you with the geometric precision and bold blue color you are looking for.

This dwarf Blue Spruce has a perfect pyramid shape, which makes it right-sized to fit into narrow spaces as well.

Baker’s Blue even has the perfect living Christmas tree that you can decorate every year for the holidays with.

In Baker’s Blue Spruce trees, the blue needles are longer and the color is superior, rich, and deep. There are gorgeous, silvery-blue needles that give you a wonderful visual relief from the heat, and this plant pairs well with a variety of other plants.


Shore Pine

In order for a landscape to function properly, it must have a focal point, and this native selection would do the job admirably.

There are many species of pines that grow along the coast of Alaska and south into Northern California, such as the wild-growing, twisting Coast Pine (Pinus contorta ‘Contorta’) that is dark green and twisted.

It would be interesting to see how they would appear if they were to be placed in a Midwestern yard under constant windy conditions.

Planting at the edges of a lake, along the coast, or even along a busy street are all possibilities for landscaping.

The toughness and adaptability of this tree allow it to survive salt spray exposure with no problem.

As long as the tree doesn’t get buffeted by high winds every day, it will eventually grow a broad rounded canopy, but it will still have a contorted trunk.

Shore Pines have been used by people for generations to produce miniature Bonsai trees as they are a source of visual interest.


Whipcord Western Red Cedar

There is an interesting mop-head of the evergreen world called the Whipcord Western Red Cedar (Thuja plicata ‘Whipcord’) that maintains a rounded, globe-shaped form of thick, threadlike tendrils.

Its interesting shape is created by the long foliage pushing up from the center, descending and weeping outwards to create its interesting appearance.

There are a number of native American plants that can be found in the Pacific Northwest, including the Whipcord Western Red Cedar.

In addition to a few other interesting facts, the Whipcord cultivar is a cultivar that has been discovered relatively recently, from a chance seedling discovered in 1986.

Whipcord Western Red Cedar is actually a cultivar of the arborvitae tree, however it maintains its shrub-like form during its lifetime of up to fifty years despite being a cultivar of the arborvitae tree. Whipcord Western Red Cedar is resistant to deer.

 


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