A naturally perfect cone of soft green needles that holds its tidy shape year after year with almost no pruning.
Dwarf Alberta Spruce (Picea glauca 'Conica') is a compact, slow-growing evergreen conifer prized for its dense, symmetrical pyramidal form and fine, soft-textured needles in a fresh grass green. New spring growth emerges a lighter, almost mint shade before deepening. Reaching only 3 to 6 feet tall and 3 to 6 feet wide over many years, it stays small and well-mannered, which makes it one of the most useful evergreens for foundation beds, entryways, formal accents, containers, and tight spaces where a full-size spruce would never fit.
Why growers choose the Dwarf Alberta Spruce
Built-in shape. Its naturally dense, perfectly conical habit needs little to no shearing to look manicured.
Evergreen all year. Soft green needles hold through every season, giving structure and color in the dead of winter.
Compact and slow. A modest 3 to 6 foot mature size and slow growth rate mean it rarely outgrows its spot or crowds a bed.
Deer tend to pass it by. Like most spruces, the stiff, resinous needles are generally not a favorite of browsing deer.
Cold-hardy and tough. Reliably hardy in USDA zones 4 through 7, it shrugs off hard northern winters.
Use it as a matched pair flanking a doorway, a repeating accent down a walkway or foundation, a living focal point in a large container, or planted in a row for a low, formal evergreen edge that defines a space without towering over it.