Common Hawthorn Tree | Crataegus monogyna
- As far as we're concerned, the common hawthorn tree deserves a bit of a fancier name, because its visual impact is truly second-to-none!
- Boasting elegant white (sometimes pink) blossoms, vivid red berries (known as haws) and attractive foliage that takes on golden hues come autumn, this thorny customer deserves a place in any garden.
- Hawthorn berries can be used to make delicious jellies, soothing herbal teas and tangy sauces (like haw-sin). You'll know the fruits are ripe when they become a little soft to touch.
- The flowers typically grow in flat clusters, the foliage is deeply-lobed and the branches are covered with spiny thorns (giving the tree the second part of its common name).
- Certified by the RHS as one of its Plants for Pollinators, the hawthorn tree supports a huge number (we're talking hundreds) of beneficial species, including bees, moths, fieldfares and dormice.
Description
- As far as we're concerned, the common hawthorn tree deserves a bit of a fancier name, because its visual impact is truly second-to-none!
- Boasting elegant white (sometimes pink) blossoms, vivid red berries (known as haws) and attractive foliage that takes on golden hues come autumn, this thorny customer deserves a place in any garden.
- Hawthorn berries can be used to make delicious jellies, soothing herbal teas and tangy sauces (like haw-sin). You'll know the fruits are ripe when they become a little soft to touch.
- The flowers typically grow in flat clusters, the foliage is deeply-lobed and the branches are covered with spiny thorns (giving the tree the second part of its common name).
- Certified by the RHS as one of its Plants for Pollinators, the hawthorn tree supports a huge number (we're talking hundreds) of beneficial species, including bees, moths, fieldfares and dormice.
Additional Information
| Title |
Half-Standard Bare Root Tree - 6/8cm Girth Trunk |
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Common Hawthorn Tree | Crataegus monogyna
Dhs. 1,120.00