Plants ordered now will begin shipping mid to late October. First come first served.

Horse Chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum), potted tree, 9-inch-pot, organic

$31.00

Family:  Soapberry (Hippocastanaceae)

Hardy to zones 4 to 8

(Conker Tree)  Native to the Balkans in Southeastern Europe, Horse chestnut is a stout deciduous tree to 80 feet tall, magnificent, with a spreading crown tipped by handsomely swollen, resiny buds.  An excellent choice for creating the mature landscape, the tree also makes a fine bonsai.  The nuts are employed for making Bach remedies and as a natural whitening agent used by dyers and weavers.  Traditional usage (TWM): tonifying blood vessels.

Potted Tree, 9-inch-deep pot, Certified Organically Grown

In stock

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  1. Question

    Debbie

    Do you ship to Massachusetts ?

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hi Debbie, Thanks for writing. We do ship to Massachusetts, along with all the other states–seeds, plants and trees–all of it! richo

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  2. Question

    Sherry Nickell

    I purchased a horse chestnut from you about 2 years ago- my dream was to put it in our front yard to creat shade eventually for our house which faces East. Now that it’s about 5’ tall- I’m starting to wonder if it will be too hot as a young tree. I live in middle TN- there have been mature trees in the front- which had weeping willow, dogwood, and tulip magnolia- which all are trees that appreciate a kind environment. Thanks- I’ve loved this tree and hope we can make it work planting it in the fall.

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      hi sherry, sometimes horse chestnut does suffer from too much heat, usually only just after transplant, especially when transplanted during the summer. If the tree has solid buds and you plant out in the fall, then it will overwinter and should do well starting next spring. When given half a chance, it is heat tolerant. Richo

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    • Sherry

      Thank you! It is one of my favorite trees- a gorgeous one on the campus of University of the south that must be quite old- my inspiration!

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  3. Diane

    Can you tell me what the blossoms look like? Are they solid white or do they have flecks of red in them? I was told farmers used to call them wagon trees because the branches spread out enough to protect their wagons from the sun.

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hi Diane, Thanks for writing. The flowers do have red in them, kinda at the base of each floret. I was just cleaning out the fridge and found a bag of stratified seeds from 11 months ago. Most of them had sprouted and dudded out, but I found 25 good ones with short tails and was able to plant them nicely. Really gotta love horse chestnut, a truly regal tree. richo

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  4. Question

    Mark

    How tall are your 9″ potted Horse Chestnut trees?

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    • One person found this helpful
      Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hi Mark,
      We put all our bigger stock into 9 inch pots and the horse chestnut grow fast and are among our largest trees that we have in the nursery. If you’re looking for a particular size, you can use the “ORDER COMMENTS” field at checkout and say something like “the bigger the better” and then nursery staff will see that when the order ships out, and choose you a bigger one.
      Richo

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  5. Question

    Kevin R Hustler (verified owner)

    We had our horse chestnut tree delivered in May and it was doing very well in it’s sunny spot in our backyard. I woke up this morning to water it and notice all the leaves were eaten off of it. I’m thinking a deer?
    I was going to cage the tree for the first year or so but thought nothing will eat this. Can I order another?

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      hi kevin, i think what happens sometimes is that we keep such good care of the tree that eventually, as other food sources dry up, something that normally wouldn’t be on the menu for deer becomes attractive to them. If only the leaves were eaten and the buds are still intact then this could be a temporary setback. yes i think the world needs more horse chestnut trees and we have nice ones available. richo

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  6. Question

    Agnes

    Hello, We live in south west Michigan. What would be the best time to plant these trees?

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      hi Agnes, SW Michigan is a zone 6-b. The Horse chestnut is hardy to zone 3, it is a good choice for your area. The best time to plant it would be in the spring. If you ordered now, we wouldn’t ship until September and there might not be time for it to dig in before winter. r

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  7. Question

    Sergey UV

    I live in Central Florida. My understanding is I could keep and grow the Horse-chestnut plant being potted, as long as I create appropriate environment, however my question is if it would survive if at some point when it’s big enough, I plant it in the ground outside

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hello Sergey, We have these listed to Zone 8 so you can give it a go. The tree does betyter in moist heat like FL and poorly in dry heat like TX. Richo

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  8. Question

    Kevin h

    Hello, I live in Massachusetts. If I buy and plant now will the tree survive through the winter?

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hi Kevin,
      I think it might stress the tree, because it won’t have time to root in much. We’ll have these in the spring, that would be a good time for you to plant one. Richo

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  9. Question

    Sandy

    Let’s say I wanted five horse chestnut trees how far apart should I plant them and how fast do they grow through the year?

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hi Sandy,
      The horse chestnuts grow about a foot a year. Or so. Depending on conditions. I had to really baby one of mine through a slow-growing period, weeding the grass out of it and repairing the cage, watering, and now it is a towering monster, currently in full flower. seems like that happened overnight. They really do have spreading arms. 30 feet apart would be about right. r

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  10. Question

    Henry

    How old are the Horse Chestnut trees you are selling in 9″ pot for $40?

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