Naturalization area: Primarily intended to provide wildlife habitat, ecological restoration, and ecosystem services. | Open Spaces. Includes commercial, industrial, and educational campuses, as well as municipal parks. | Highway. Includes sites that are open spaces along major highways, and expressways. Typically high salt content, and very long maintenance of the trees. | Residential area: Select this option if you're planting on your own property (like your backyard), or if you're an organization planting trees in a residential area. | Wide Median or Boulevard. Typically, a divider between two roads, with a small width of 1 to 3 m, or a boulevard between a roadway and a sidewalk | Restricted Urban Site/ hardscaped landscape. | Upland Naturalization: Primarily upland or well drained to shallow sites
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21 - 30 m
Zone 5 (a/b) | Zone 6 (a/b)
Full sun: At least 6 hours of direct sunlight every day during the growing season. | Partial sun: Less than 6 hours of direct sunlight or filtered light for most of the day.
Yes, but the water is absorbed in under 12 hours (high drainage)
No
Deciduous
About the height of a 3 storey house (9-15 meters)
About the length of 3 average cars (10-15 meters)
Fast (60cm or more per year)
ontario_native | north_america_native
Sassafras albidum, or sassafras, is a native North American tree belonging to the Laurel family, found throughout Eastern North America. It prefers moist, well-drained, acidic, loamy soils, but can tolerate dry and sandy soils, and even clay as long as it does not have poor drainage. It thrives in full sun to part shade, making it suitable for a variety of garden locations, including naturalized plantings, screens, or as a striking lawn specimen. Considered somewhat aggressive since it spreads through suckers quite readily. Sassafras is a hardy tree, adaptable to USDA Zones 4 to 9. In its native range, sassafras can be found in wood margins, thickets, roadsides, and fields in large colonies. Crushed leaves have a fragrant lemony scent. Sassafras is relatively free of insect and disease problems, although it can suffer from chlorosis in alkaline soils. It is also tolerant of deer, drought, and black walnut trees. Sassafras albidum drops a moderate number of leaves and small seed clusters, with the heaviest shedding in the fall.