TreeHelp.com
Your Account Help Contact


Tree Care Info

BBBOnLine Reliability Seal

BizRate Customer Certified (GOLD) Site

ORDER ONLINE or
BY TOLL-FREE PHONE
1-877-356-7333

Jeff Tekavcic is the General Manager of TreeHelp.com.  If you have questions about TreeHelp's products, please do not hesitate to contact him or any of our staff. Need help with our products?
Read our FAQs
or
Contact
Customer Service

$6.95 Flat-fee shipping
¤
U.S. orders shipped from Buffalo, NY
¤
Canadian orders shipped from Toronto, ON


Home > Trees > Species Info > Oak Trees > Types of Oak Trees >
Live Oak

Quercus virginiana

Summary
Foliage: Evergreen broadleaf
Height: 30 to 40 feet
Spread: 40 to 60 feet
Shape: Spreading

A massive shade tree with evergreen foliage that is bright olive-green when new and changes to a glossy, dark green when mature.


Plant Needs
Zone: 7 to 10
Light: Partial shade to full sun
Moisture: Wet to moist
Soil Type: Sandy, loam, or clay
pH Range: 3.7 to 7.0 


Functions
Suggested uses for this plant include shade, street tree, and specimen plant.


Planting Notes
Transplant small size trees.  Tolerates soils ranging from light sand to heavy and compact silt and clay.   Tolerates a wide range of moisture conditions.  Tolerates salt spray.
Requires large area for branches and roots to spread. 


Care
Prune when young to establish main branches.  Maintain adequate soil conditions.


Problems
No serious pest or disease problems.  Gall insect is more unsightly than damaging.  Susceptible to root rot in coastal areas.


Alternatives
Consult local sources, including historic or public gardens and arboreta, regarding cultivars and related species that grow well in your area.

Cultivars of QUERCUS VIRGINIANA
No important cultivars.


Comments
An evergreen member of the oak family, the Live Oak is cold hardy in the Tidewater area and as far north as Williamsburg.   A magnificent shade tree; however, its large, wide-spreading, horizontal branches make it inappropriate for small properties. The acorns of the Live Oak are eaten by many animals.

This material was developed by Carol Ness as part of the Interactive Design and Development Project funded by the Kellogg Foundation. Mary Miller, Project Director. Diane Relf, Content Specialist, Horticulture. Copyright 1989 by VCE.

Back to Types of Oak Trees

TOP

 

Browse the Oak Section

Oak Home
Soil Improvement
Fertilizing
Types of Oak
Insects & Diseases
Register Your Oak
Products for your oak tree

 
TreeHelp Store
¤
Flat-rate shipping
¤

Oak Care Kit
Annual Care Kit for Oak Trees

Including: specially selected fertilizer, mycorrhizal fungi, and a biostimulant.



TreeHelp
Rope Saw

Easy and safe way to prune high branches yourself

 

TreeHelp.com currently accepts
TreeHelp.com accepts Visa, MasterCard, AMEX, Discover and PayPal payments.