Greenleaf Manzanita Tree Seeds | (Arctostaphylos patula)
Crooked branches. Burnished red bark. Pink flowers in February when everything else is still dormant. Manzanita plays by its own rules. Greenleaf Manzanita is a tough, striking shrub native to the mountain slopes and chaparral of the American West — a plant that thrives where others give up, on rocky dry ridges from the Sierra Nevada to the Rockies. It is one of the most ecologically important shrubs in its range, a cornerstone of Western wildlife habitat, and one of the most visually distinctive plants you can grow from seed. If you are looking to buy Greenleaf Manzanita seeds or grow Arctostaphylos patula from seed, this is where to start. 5 reasons to grow Greenleaf Manzanita from seed: Exceptionally drought-tolerant once established — thrives in thin, rocky, low-nutrient soils Smooth, deep red-to-mahogany bark is ornamentally striking year-round Early-blooming pink flower clusters provide critical late-winter nectar for bees and hummingbirds before most plants have leafed out Small apple-like berries (manzanita means "little apple" in Spanish) are wildlife food for bears, deer, birds, and small mammals Excellent for erosion control, fire-adapted landscapes, and low-water Western gardens Things you probably did not know about Greenleaf Manzanita The genus Arctostaphylos is almost exclusively North American, with the greatest diversity concentrated in California — a botanical phenomenon so unusual that California is considered a world center of manzanita evolution. Over 100 species and subspecies exist, many of them hyper-local endemics found only on a single hillside or in a single county. Greenleaf Manzanita is one of the more widespread and adaptable members of this exceptional group. Manzanita bark does something no other common shrub bark does in quite the same way — it peels continuously throughout the year, revealing smooth, cool-to-the-touch new bark underneath in shades ranging from deep burgundy to polished chestnut. The peeling is not a sign of disease. It is how the plant sheds heat, discourages bark-boring insects, and maintains a living outer layer that resists fire better than rough bark. Greenleaf Manzanita is what ecologists call a fire-adapted species. It has two survival strategies depending on the severity of the burn. In moderate fires, it resprouts vigorously from a woody burl at the base. In hot fires that destroy the burl entirely, it relies on its seeds — which require fire scarification to germinate. The plant essentially uses fire as part of its reproductive cycle, having evolved alongside the chaparral fire regime for millions of years. Indigenous peoples across the Sierra Nevada and Great Basin used manzanita berries extensively. They were eaten fresh, dried, and ground into a meal that could be mixed with water to make a refreshing cider-like drink. The berries have a high sugar content and a slightly tart, apple-adjacent flavor. Some tribes also used the leaves medicinally and the wood for making tools and implements, prizing its hardness and density. Growing Details Botanical Name: Arctostaphylos patula Stratification: Seeds require scarification followed by cold stratification — soak in hot water, then cold stratify for 60–90 days at 33–38°F USDA Zones: 5–9 Soil: Rocky, sandy, extremely well-drained — low fertility preferred; does not tolerate wet or clay soils Light: Full sun Height: 3–8 feet Spread: 4–10 feet Growth Rate: Slow to moderate Greenleaf Manzanita does not ask for much. Give it sun, give it drainage, leave it alone, and it will give you decades of that burnished red bark, those early pink flowers, and the steady procession of wildlife that comes with it.
Specifications
- Quantity
- 5 Seeds, 10 Seeds, 25 Seeds, 40 Seeds, 100 Seeds
Variants (5)
- 5 Seeds — 7.99 USD — In stock
- 10 Seeds — 12.99 USD — In stock
- 25 Seeds — 25.99 USD — In stock
- 40 Seeds — 37.99 USD — In stock
- 100 Seeds — 89.99 USD — In stock
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