Compact Shrub With Lush Year-Round Foliage
A small evergreen with lush emerald leaves, the Dwarf Hinoki Cypress Shrub is a popular pick for decorating entryways, path borders, garden beds, and more. It works well in most spaces, including shady areas and tight corners of your landscape.
The shrub’s slow, steady growth means it will conform nicely to any plants or trees around it. Evergreen and hardy, the Dwarf Hinoki Cypress will keep its lush, velvety foliage all year long. Plus, its upright growth makes pruning virtually unnecessary—you can let it go and let it grow!
Among the most distinct evergreens, the Dwarf Hinoki Cypress has a near-indescribable beauty. Its deep green foliage blends seamlessly into luxurious, fan-like leaves. Appearing soft and feathery, this shrub also maintains a dense, rounded form that creates strong visual interest in the winter.
The Dwarf Hinoki Cypress Shrub is a rare variety that can fit in with any aesthetic. Whether you’re going for a Zen or contemporary style, or more traditional landscaping, this plant will look as if it was always meant to be there.
Ready to level up your yard with the easy-care, evergreen Dwarf Hinoki Cypress Shrub? Grab one (or a few) of your own today!
Planting & Care
1. Planting: First, select a location for your Hinoki Cypress with well-drained soil and full to partial sun – any area with 4 to 8 hours of sunlight per day is ideal.
Then, dig a hole that’s about one and a half to two times the size of your plant’s root ball, place the Cypress in the hole, backfill the soil and water to settle the roots.
If you’re planting in a pot, ensure that the pot is about twice as large as your tree’s shipped container. Also, make sure it has drainage holes. Use organic planting mix, place your tree and then move your tree to a sunny location on your porch or patio.
2. Watering: Your Cypress is moderately drought tolerant once it’s established, but it’s important to have a regular watering schedule. Water about once weekly or check the surrounding soil – if the surrounding soil is dry about 2 or 3 inches down, it’s time to water. If it’s planted in a container, give your Cypress a drink until water drains from the bottom of the pot.
3. Fertilizing: Generally, the Hinoki won’t need fertilizing, but if you’d like, you can apply a well-balanced, general-purpose fertilizer in early spring, before new growth begins.
4. Pruning: Your Hinoki will grow into its signature form without pruning, but we recommend removing dead or dying branches to encourage healthy growth.