Trees and Shrubs for Sale

All trees and shrubs are grown on site, no-spray organic. Stock is limited and changes through the season. Pickup by appointment in West Lima or La Farge — email fermentation@beyondvineyard.com to reserve.

American Mountain Ash — $13

Sorbus americana

  • Bright orange berries, wildlife food
  • Grows 30’ – 35’ high
  • Hardy to Zone 3
  • Used for wind breaks

American Plum — $15

Prunus americana

  • Plant in colder spots to prevent early flowering
  • Grows 12’ – 15’ high
  • Need 2 for pollination
  • Sweet red fruit, 1 1/2” in diameter

Aronia — $13

Aronia melanocarpa

  • Need 2 plants for better pollination
  • 8 feet high by 4 feet wide
  • Flavor is slightly astringent
  • Best for baking, cooking and juicing

Bald Cypress — $11

Taxodium distichum

  • May live more than 1,000 years.
  • Adapt easily to a wide range of sites.
  • Young trees grow rapidly on good sites
  • Extremely durable wood.

Black Currant “Noir de Bourgogne” — $13

Ribes sp.

  • 3-4’ high
  • does well in a variety of soils
  • black currants are highest in vitamin C
  • this cultivar is the standard for Creme de Cassis
  • Berries freeze and keep well

Bur Oak — $13

Quercus macrocarpa

  • Native in the midwest
  • Grows 50’ – 90’ high
  • Prefers well-drained soil
  • largest acorns of any oak

Chinese Lilac — $17

Syringa x chinensis

  • Minimal suckering
  • Grows 8-15 feet tall, 5-8 feet wide
  • Light Purple flowers

Ezra’s Uncle’s Seedling Apricot — $12

Prunus armeniaca

  • Plant in colder spots to prevent early flowering
  • Grows 12’ – 15’ high
  • Need 2 for pollination
  • Very cold hardy

False Indigo — $13

Amorpha fruticosa

  • Nitrogen fixer; fertilizes nearby plants
  • Grows 5 – 8 feet tall, 5-8 feet wide
  • Purple tube-shaped flowers
  • Excellent attractor for bees and butterflies

Figs (potted trees) — $25 – $35

Ficus carica

  • In upper midwest, grow in container
  • figs are self-fruitful
  • can plant in ground Zone 6
  • can also grow indoors as houseplant

Ginkgo — $20

Ginkgo biloba

  • One of the oldest species of trees
  • 60’ – 100’ high
  • Grows best in well drained soil
  • Very long lived trees

Hardy Pecan — $13

Carya illinoinensis

  • Need 2 for pollination
  • Grows 40’ – 60’ high
  • Pecan wood is very useful
  • 10-15 years to bear nuts

Kentucky Coffeetree — $13

Gymnocladus dioicus

  • Native in the midwest
  • Grows 60’ – 70’ high
  • Roasted seeds are coffee substitute
  • Seeds were used for jewelry by area tribes

Late Blooming Lilac — $17

Syringa x villosa

  • 8’ – 15’
  • lavender flowers
  • flowers when other lilacs are finished
  • minimal suckering

Nanking Cherry — $12

Prunus tomentosa

  • Need 2 plants for pollination
  • 5 feet high by 4 feet wide
  • Flavor is between sweet and tart
  • Best for fresh eating and juicing

Nannyberry — $13

Viburnum lentago

  • Native wildlife cover
  • Up to 20 feet high
  • Erosion control
  • Fruit is best after a frost

Ninebark — $11

Physocarpus opulifolius

  • Hardy to zone 2
  • 5’ – 8’ high
  • Exfoliating bark
  • ornamental hedge
  • white to pink flowers

Northern Red Oak — $13

Quercus rubra

  • 50′-75′
  • leaves turn brownish-red in autumn
  • moderate-to-fast growing
  • native in upper midwest

Paper Birch — $12

Betula papyrifera

  • 50′ to 70′
  • white bark that peels off
  • hardy native
  • naturally grows in clumps

Pawpaw — $12

Asimina triloba

  • Need at least 2 plants pollination
  • 15 feet high by 8 feet wide
  • Flavor tastes like mango mixed with banana
  • Best for fresh eating, baking; pulp freezes well

Persimmon — $15

Diospyros virginiana

  • Need at least 2 plants for pollination
  • 15-60 feet high, very slow growing
  • Wood used as substitute for ebony
  • Best used for baking, jam and wine

Purple Lilac — $17

Syringa vulgaris

  • 10 to 12′
  • deep purple to wine red, sweetly fragrant
  • flowers late April to early May
  • mandatory plant in every Driftless homestead

‘Ranch’ Elderberry — $11

Sambucus canadensis

  • tolerates wet soils and partial shade
  • berries are high in anthocyanins
  • Zones 3-9 Hardy in all the upper midwest
  • use for jam, jelly, syrup, tincture
  • useful for hedgerows, riparian edges, and wildlife plantings.

Red Maple — $13

Acer rubrum

  • Hardy to zone 3
  • Brilliant red fall foliage
  • Fast-growing
  • Early spring red flowers
  • 40’ – 70’

River Birch — $11

Betula nigra

  • small to medium tree
  • exfoliating bark
  • native in upper midwest
  • often found growing on streambanks

Sand Cherry — $13

Prunus besseyi

  • 3′ – 6′ low growing shrub
  • prefers partial shade or partial sun to full sun
  • purple to black fruits
  • can tolerate hot dry site

Shellbark Hickory — $13

Carya laciniosa

  • Grows 60’ – 100’ high
  • Larger nuts than shagbark
  • Zone 5; Needs microclimate or ridge
  • 10-15 years to bear nuts

Siberian C Peach — $20

Prunus sp

  • White seedling peach
  • 4th generation breeding project
  • Grows 15’ – 20’ high
  • Peaches are smaller than southern peaches
  • most cold hardy peach in existence

“SKIOKA” Hybrid Chestnut — $11

Castanea sp.

  • Castanea sativa × mollissima hybrid
  • 25’ high / 25’ wide when mature
  • Need 2 for pollination
  • Chestnuts average about 8-10 grams, very sweet

Sugar Maple — $11

Acer saccharum

  • Hardy to zone 3
  • can live 300 years
  • best for maple syrup
  • Wisconsin native
  • 80’ -100’

Swamp White Oak — $13

Quercus bicolor

  • Native in the midwest
  • Grows 50’ – 60’ high
  • Prefers well-drained soil
  • One of the most important oaks for lumber

Tulip Poplar — $15

Liriodendron tulipifera

  • 60′ to 90′
  • likes moist well drained soils
  • used for wind breaks and reforestation
  • very ornamental flowers

Washington Hawthorn — $13

Crataegus phaenopyrum

  • Hardy to zone 4b
  • red-orange fruit
  • berries are edible
  • Cedar Waxwings feed on berries
  • grows to 30’

White Lilac — $17

Syringa vulgaris

  • 10 to 12′
  • single white flowers, sweetly fragrant
  • flowers late April to early May
  • best in full sun

White Oak — $13

Quercus alba

  • Native in the midwest
  • Grows 60’ – 80’ high
  • Prefers well-drained soil
  • Acorns are less bitter than other oaks
  • Can live for hundreds of years

Wild Blackberry — $7

Rubus spp

  • 5-6′
  • fruit ripens in July
  • does have thorns
  • also good for wildlife

Witchhazel — $13

Hamamelis virginiana

  • Leaves and bark used to make astringent decoction
  • Grows 10-20 feet depending on location
  • Fragrant yellow-orange flowers
  • Flowers in November – December

Ordering

Email fermentation@beyondvineyard.com or call 608-625-4619 to confirm stock and arrange pickup. Payment by cash, local check, PayPal, or Venmo. Local delivery within 25 miles possible for orders over $100.

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37 species, alphabetical. Same content is saved as trees-for-sale-page.html in your folder if the chat copy gets unwieldy.