Description
Bundle of 10
At a Glance: Pacific Crabapple is a shrub or small tree that frequents moist woods, swamps, edges of standing and flowing water, upper beaches, and often fringing estuaries. It grows 6’-40’ tall and is armed with sharp spur-shoots. Older bark is deeply fissured.
Leaves: leaves are alternate, deciduous, lance to egg-shaped. Pointed at the end, toothed with irregular lobes they turn red or yellow-orange in fall.
Flowers: 5-12 white to pink showy fragrant apple blossoms grow in flat-topped clusters on spur-shoots.
Fruit: Small, egg-shaped apples are green becoming reddish, edible but quite tart.
Growing Conditions:
Sun/Shade Tolerance | Hydrology | Elevation Range |
Full sun 80%-100%
Most sun 60%-80%
|
Moist
Wet
|
Low elevations
Mid elevations
|
References:
MacKinnon, A., Pojar, J., & Alaback, P. B. (1994). Plants of the Pacific Northwest coast: Washington, Oregon, British Columbia & Alaska. Richmond, Wash: Lone Pine Publishing.