Picea pungens baby blue eyes in a private garden planted in 2003.
Baby blue eyes spruce size.
Broad and conical when mature.
Baby blue eyes is considered a semi dwarf tree and tops out at about 25 feet.
The baby blue eyes spruce fits that perfectly and it doesn t become a giant tree.
Montgomery blue spruce picea pungens montgomery grows 5 to 6 feet high and 5 to 6 feet wide.
Baby blueyes is a semi dwarf cultivar that will grow to 15 20 tall over time.
Specific epithet means sharp pointed in reference to the needles.
Picea pungens baby blue eyes sku 3843 slower growing than the native colorado spruce this semi dwarf selection is useful for smaller landscapes and confined spaces.
In 1972 it was discovered as a chance seedling in a cultivated group of grafted picea pungens moerheimii trees.
Just 6 feet tall after 10 years it is perfect for a smaller garden or for foundation planting around your house.
A typical colorado blue spruce will grow 50 75 feet tall and 20 feet wide.
For homeowners with size constraints this simply will not work.
Baby blue eyes spruce will grow to be about 15 feet tall at maturity with a spread of 6 feet.
A dense pyramidal cultivar with very good silver blue color.
As can be seen the plant pushed 6 inches or more of new growth that year.
Instead it stays compact and full with branches right to the ground.
But what caught its discoverer s eye was its tendency to naturally achieve the iconic pyramidal shape for which blue spruces are valued.
It can be grown from seed and is denser and slower growing than other cultivars.
Plant patent pp5 457 was issued on april 30 1987.
If left to grow naturally it takes on the typical pyramid shape seen in many conifers.
Depending on climate of growing location baby blue spruce grows to a full sized tree approximately 35 45 feet tall but is somewhat more slender than common colorado blue spruce.
Baby blue is a mid sized spruce that reaches heights of between 15 and 20 feet and usually spans anywhere from six to ten feet across.
It has a low canopy and is suitable for planting under power lines.
While not a true dwarf ornamental the baby blue eyes spruce tree is the closest thing to a dwarf evergreen tree on the market today.
Hoops blue spruce picea pungens hoopsii.
Photo by ken church picea pungens baby blue eyes in the gotelli collection at the us national arboretum washington dc may 2006.