Wichita Blue Juniper

Juniper Plants for the Southwest

Juniper Plants for the Southwest are easy growing evergreen plants and or trees.  They are drought tolerant and mainly used for groundcover or ornamental landscaping for your home or business.  They are hardy to about -20 degrees F.  but are susceptible to spider mites in the southwest.  We have here are Juniper plants and trees that will do well in warmer climates.


Spartan Juniper Tree (Juniperus chinensis) Evergreen ornamental tree that likes full sun and is drought tolerant once established usually by the third after initial planting.  These majestic evergreen trees are normally used in formal topiary but can also be used to control street noise or nosey neighbors.

Juniper Plants for the Southwest
Spartan Junipers were used for a privacy wall.

This conifer grows to about 15ft. tall and 5ft wide. Does well in large containers, perfect for that grand indoor entrance. Will do great in the desert southwest. It can also be planted outdoors in full sun. They do require lots of water when first planted. Perfect for outdoor Christmas tree decoration.

Perfect for a front entrance.  They do well in containers providing you water and fertilize more often.  A good tree that will also give privacy to neighbors or street noise.  Read more about trees on “How to block neighbors’ view of my yard”.

USDA zones 4-9


Juniper Plants for Landscaping

The Moor-dense juniper  (Juniperus sabina).  This Juniper Grows about 2-3 ft. tall and 6ft. wide. Bright evergreen foliage. You can use this juniper in rock gardens and xeriscaping settings.

Juniper Plants
Moor-Dense Juniper bottom right corner.

It is drought tolerant once established. It does well in the desert southwest. If you have erosion control problems then this is the shrub to use.

USDA zones 3-7

Landscaping with Juniper in the Southwest

Dwarf Japanese Juniper (Juniperus procumbens Nana) If you are looking for low evergreen ground cover this is it. Grows about 1-2 ft. tall and spreads over 6ft. wide.

Many landscapers use this juniper as ground cover.  In winter the foliage will turn a bronze color.  Use them for soil erosion or to add spacing between taller shrubs.  Very little pruning or maintenance involved.

USDA zone 4-9

The dwarf Juniperus procumbens in summer-time

 


Prince Whales  (Juniperus horizontalis ) This evergreen juniper is evergreen and it turns a purplish color during the winter months providing your landscape with more color. It grows to about 1 ft. tall and 10′ wide yes that is feet wide.  You can see photos of this plant over at monrovia.com

 


Juniper Plants for the Southwest
Wichita Blue Juniper

The Witchita Blue (Juniperus scopulorum). This great-looking Juniper is great for a stand-alone tree.  Plant several of them in a row for a great border wall.  Click here for information on this Juniper tree.


The Western Juniper in the middle is neatly trimmed into a topiary landscape.  A blue point Juniper just to the right.  Both are drought resistant once established.

All juniper plants are susceptible to spider mites.  Learn more about Insects and diseases on plants.

Check out our post for Cypress trees for the desert Southwest.

Juniper Plants for the Southwest

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