R J Trees and Hedging Ltd Registered office The School, The Green, Biddestone, SN14 7DG, United Kingdom, Registered in GB
Company Registration Number 13563017 VAT no. 392152401
Birch - Silver (Betula pendula)
10% off Orders over £1000+VAT
15% off Orders over £2000+VAT
Minimum order value (all plants) is £300+VAT
Free Delivery over £300+VAT excl Highlands and Islands
Please order plants in multiples of 25
Key Features
Silver birch trees (Betula pendula) are
- Suitable as a woodland tree or urban tree, the commonest native woodland tree in Britain
- Native
- Deciduous
- Suitable for areas near livestock (non-toxic)
- Some of our bare root Silver Birch trees are from "improved" seed which means the seed has been harvested from trees that are especially bred for forestry and productive woodlands, grown from Future Trees Trust origin stock (please speak to us if you are planting for forestry/productive woodlands (ie for timber production in due course) so that we can ensure we allocate your order from the orchard seed batch - see our blog on seed provenance.
Grown by us in Herefordshire. Buy with confidence - read our customer reviews.
The specifications shown below are our normal range but we often have additional options. If there is something that you are looking for, it's often worth contacting us.
Please contact us if you would prefer to order on the phone or have any questions or to discuss a discount for larger quantities.
Full Product Description
Our range of Silver Birch bare root trees (Betula pendula)
We have Silver Birch bare root trees in several sizes. The 1+0 1 year old plants are seedlings (often called whips) which were sown from seed in the spring and are sold during the following November to April months when dormant ie they are one year old. We have Silver Birch bare root whips in several heights. These tree saplings are grown by us in Herefordshire.
We always have several batches of Betula pendula seed from which we grow the tree saplings - including orchard seed which is the highest possible quality tree seed for trees to be grown for timber. We generally also have local British provenance seed and sometimes some of the highest quality imported seed so if it is particularly important to you to have orchard seed or UK provenance seed, please give us a call.
Silver Birch (Betula pendula) Summary
Silver birch are medium sized graceful, slender native trees with pendulous branches angled at 45 degrees, and a light airy canopy, often planted quite close together to striking affect. There are very few medium height woodland trees - woodland trees tend to either be tall or small. These will grow to a medium height because they often grow in open areas, clearings or woodland edges, where they are not shaded by tall trees. Their trunks are light coloured, greyish white, developing darker near the base as the tree matures and fissured into rough diamond shapes and the distinctive white bark sheds in layers. The branches are very thin and twiggy (picture a birch besom broom which is made from birch twigs).
Downy Birch tends to be the birch tree of choice in Scotland. This blog explains the differences between Silver birch and Downy birch and on this page we concentrate on Silver Birch.
Sometimes called "lady of the woods" a term given to silver birch by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, they like to grow in a sunny situation, and when mature create a light, open atmosphere (ethereal in winter) and perfect conditions for a range of woodland ground cover plants and shrubs to grow and for shade loving trees to thrive. They tend not to regenerate (despite millions of tiny windborne seeds) because they like an open aspect and disturbed soil to germinate. They do their job of helping new woodlands to establish quickly, and then they leave the long term job to oak trees and beech trees, living only to about 80-100 years. As well as being an excellent pioneer woodland tree (read more about pioneer trees in our blog). they are useful to plant as a shelter belt to protect slower growing species.
They are tolerant of a range of temperatures including very cold. Silver birch trees can improve soil quality - their widespreading roots gather nutrients into the tree which then relinquishes them into the soil when the leaves drop.
The leaves are eaten by aphids which then attracts a range of other wildlife which feed on the aphids. They are a vital habitat for over 300 insect species as well as providing a nesting site for hole-nesters like woodpeckers.
Birch is one of the strongest timbers commonly grown in Britain only slightly less dense than Beech and it is more dense than Sycamore. The wood works and finishes well and can be used for furniture, fittings and paper. Silver birch wood burns hot (spits in open fires so best reserved for stoves) and it makes good charcoal. It is not grown much for timber in Britain, but that is probably more to do with the quality of the existing stands of trees and the new birch orchards that are now producing improved seed will address that. We know that Birch is a very important timber species in Scandinvia (particularly Finland) for veneers, plywood and pulp. It can produce valuable timber in relatively short rotations (as short as 40 years) if grown on good sites.
Only approx 10% of the bare root Betula pendula trees grown from seed in this country are from orchard seeds and only a handful of nurseries grow "improved birch" which is the best for forestry/productive woodlands having been bred from carefully selected "plus" trees. The process to produce seed from improved birch trees (once suitable trees have been identified) is to take plant material from the plus trees and graft it onto rootstocks, grow on in carefully supervised conditions for at least 2 years, and then plant out into an orchard and wait for about 15 more years for seed production to be viable. RJ Trees and Hedging is one of the very few nurseries growing improved birch trees from orchard seed. We have a blog on seed provenance which covers seed orchards.
Soil and Situation
All soil types are suitable and the ideal situation is moist, well drained soil, in full sun or light shade but they will also cope with dry soil. For the north of Scotland and far west and higher altitudes, Downy Birch is the popular birch species, but silver birch is grown all over the UK and is more common in the south and east of Britain. Although birches do best in rich, fresh soils, they are able to survive and grow on the most forbidding landscapes including mine spoils, landslides and drained peatlands. It tolerates a soil pH as low as 3.3. If birch is being grown for timber then it is advisable to grow it on good sites capable of sustaining a fast growth rate - freely drained, light mineral soils are best. Grown on infertile, exposed, uplands means birch is unlikely to produce quality timber even with management, but it is still useful for conservation and amenity and there can be some timber use like firewood and pulp.
Leaves, flowers, fruit and bark
The leaves are quite small (about 3-5cm), alternate, triangular or “arrow head” shaped with jagged teeth on the edges, on hairless stalks about 2cm long. They come into leaf early in spring which helps explain the association of this species with fertility and renewal in Celtic mythology.
Male and female flowers occur on the same tree. The male are yellow drooping catkins at the end of twigs. Female catkins are green and upright and are pollinated by wind, after which they turn red before dispersing seed. The seed ripens from July to October and each catkins contains about 450 seeds so seed falls can be very large with 250,000 seeds per m2 recorded.
The bark is a main feature of silver birch trees. Although the bark appears delicate, it is remarkably tough and contains oils that have both anti-bacterial and anti-fungal properties and as a result birch bark has been used since pre-historic times for baskets, footwear and canoes as well as a building material. The bark stores waxy resins which was used in ancient times as a glue and can be used nowadays as a firelighter. The bark is patterned with horizontal lines (called lenticels), which act as channels for gas exchange and help the tree to shed pollutants and clean out its breathing pores.
The buds, leaves and branches have an alternate pattern.
Eventual height and growth rate of Silver birch trees
The eventual height is about 20-30m and growth rate is fast for the first 20 years, after which growth is slow. They are not very long living trees - about 50-100 years is the norm. When establishing birch woodlands it is important that the top of the plant is clear of competing vegetation so good weed control is essential and weeding should be done by the beginning of summer to ensure good light levels for the birch trees.
Betulaceae family.
Delivery Information
Free Delivery
For deliveries of orders over £300 + VAT, (which is our minimum order value) we have free delivery to all mainland areas nationwide. If you are in the Scottish Highlands or any of the Islands, please email us or call us and we will quote you a delivery charge which we will subsidise.
All orders are despatched on pallets and will be delivered to the kerbside. We will email you to tell you when your order has been despatched and that email will contain a link so that you can track your delivery.
You can request a specific delivery date when you place your order and we will do our very best to accommodate that date but cannot be held responsible if we do not meet it.
Collections from Ross-on-Wye
You can collect your plants by arrangement with our office team. Please ring us on 01989 552028 to agree a collection date. The postcode for collections is HR9 7TF.
As a trade nursery, we normally despatch stock unbagged (packed horizontally on pallets) but we can offer two bagging options.
Bagging Options
We have two options for despatching plants in bags (you do not need to have them bagged but it is advisable if there is any delay in planting and where you have large quantities, delay in planting some is inevitable).
- Very heavy duty black bags - normally used by farmers, landowners, landscapers etc
- Co-extruded bags which are white on the outside, to reflect sunlight, and black inside, to retain moisture on the roots - normally used by foresters.
In both cases, there is a considerable labour cost to us in putting stock into bags, and then the air in the bags takes up a considerable amount of space on the pallet which means that we get many fewer plants onto a pallet compared with unbagged stock eg for 1+0 seedlings instead of approx. 10,000 plants per pallet of unbagged stock, we'd only get approx. 5,000 plants per pallet if they are bagged. There's also a significant labour cost in putting plants into bags compared with loose packing on a pallet (which is the normal method for nursery to nursery sales). Given that we pay the delivery cost on most orders, supplying stock in bags is a significant extra cost for us for some customers and hence we make a modest charge.
You can specifically request black or white bags on the website after you add plants to your shopping basket. Here is a link to the page Bagging Service for bare root plants for farms and forestry – rjtreesandhedging. Please order the same quantity as the number of plants you are buying - the pricing for bagging is per plant rather than per bag.