Why Landscaping Moves the Market
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First impressions sell. Professional photos pop when there’s structure (evergreens), color (flowering shrubs), and shade (well-placed trees).
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Comfort = value. Shade trees can reduce summer heat gain and make outdoor spaces usable longer. Wind-breaks (evergreen screens) help in winter.
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Low maintenance wins. Buyers love “set-it-and-forget-it” landscapes: drought-tolerant, disease-resistant, and tidy year-round.
DMV quick facts: Our area generally spans USDA Zones 6b–8a. Many neighborhoods have clay-leaning soils and varying deer pressure. Choose plants that handle our summers, brief cold snaps, and occasional drought.
Planting Principles That Pay Off
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Right plant, right place. Match sun, soil, and moisture to the plant’s needs.
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Think in layers. Canopy tree → understory tree → evergreen structure → flowering shrubs → groundcovers.
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Mind the distances.
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Large trees: 20–30 ft from the house/septic lines.
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Medium trees: 15–20 ft.
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Shrubs: 3–6 ft from foundations/fences for airflow and future growth.
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Call before you dig. Contact 811 to mark underground utilities.
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Mulch right. 2–3″ of mulch, pulled away from the trunk (no “volcano” mounds).
Best Small & Ornamental Trees (Great Near Homes & Walkways)
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Eastern Redbud (Cercis canadensis)
Spring flowers, heart-shaped leaves, multi-season interest. Handles clay. Low water once established. -
Serviceberry (Amelanchier canadensis)
Four-season star: early blooms, edible berries, great fall color, graceful form. -
Sweetbay Magnolia (Magnolia virginiana)
Fragrant flowers, semi-evergreen in much of the DMV, tolerates damp sites. -
Kousa Dogwood (Cornus kousa) / Hybrid dogwoods
More disease-resistant than some natives; lovely blooms and fruit for birds. -
Crape Myrtle (Lagerstroemia indica & hybrids)
Summer color when others are quiet; drought-tolerant. Choose dwarf/medium cultivars for tight lots; avoid hard “topping”—light, proper pruning only.
Best Medium–Large Shade Trees (Energy Savers & Value Builders)
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Black Gum / Tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica)
Brilliant fall color, strong structure, deep roots; great street or yard tree. -
White Oak / Swamp White Oak (Quercus alba / Q. bicolor)
Long-lived, supports local ecosystems, excellent shade; deep roots = foundation-friendly when sited properly. -
American Hornbeam (Carpinus caroliniana)
Elegant, slow-to-moderate growth, handles part shade; great near patios. -
River Birch (Betula nigra)
Beautiful peeling bark; best sited away from drains—it seeks moisture. -
American Elm (disease-resistant cultivars like ‘Princeton’)
Classic vase shape; pick resistant varieties only.
Pro tip: Plant shade trees on the west/southwest side to cut summer afternoon heat.
Evergreen Structure & Privacy Screens (Year-Round Curb Appeal)
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American Holly / ‘Nellie R. Stevens’ Holly (Ilex opaca, Ilex hybrid)
Dense, glossy foliage; berries for birds; great as a screen or specimen. -
‘Green Giant’ Arborvitae (Thuja standishii × plicata)
Fast, hardy, tall privacy wall with fewer disease issues than Leyland cypress. -
Inkberry Holly (Ilex glabra ‘Shamrock’, ‘Compacta’)
Boxwood alternative—tolerates clay and moisture, holds a neat shape. -
Bayberry (Morella pensylvanica)
Tough, fragrant foliage, salt-tolerant; informal hedges and coastal-style gardens. -
Skip Laurel (Prunus laurocerasus ‘Schipkaensis’)
Narrow, shade-tolerant screening; protect from harsh winter wind where exposed.
Flowering, Low-Maintenance Shrubs (Color Without the Fuss)
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Virginia Sweetspire (Itea virginica)
Spring bottlebrush blooms, red fall color, handles wet or dry once established. -
Summersweet (Clethra alnifolia)
Fragrant midsummer blooms (pollinator magnet), thrives in part shade. -
Hydrangea ‘Limelight’ / ‘Bobo’ (Hydrangea paniculata)
Sun-tolerant, reliable bloomers; great for front corners and anchor points. -
Arrowwood Viburnum (Viburnum dentatum)
White spring flowers, berries, fall color; good for hedges. -
Red/Black Chokeberry (Aronia)
Tough natives with spring flowers, fall foliage, and bird-friendly fruit.
Boxwood note: Beautiful but boxwood blight is a reality. Mix in inkberry holly or small hollies to reduce risk and maintenance.
Drought-Tolerant & Pollinator-Friendly Picks
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Trees: Redbud, serviceberry, crape myrtle, black gum.
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Shrubs: Bayberry, inkberry holly, chokeberry, viburnum, spirea.
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Bonus groundcovers/accents:
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Perennials/Grasses: Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum), little bluestem, echinacea, rudbeckia.
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Groundcovers: creeping thyme, ajuga (for sun/part shade), woodland phlox (shade).
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Trees & Shrubs to Avoid (or Site Carefully)
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Silver Maple, Weeping Willow, Lombardy Poplar
Aggressive roots/weak wood; risky near foundations, sidewalks, and lines. -
Bradford/Callery Pear
Invasive and prone to storm breakage. -
Tree-of-Heaven, Norway Maple, Mimosa
Invasive, self-seeding; hard to control. -
Running Bamboo (Phyllostachys spp.)
Spreads rapidly; can damage hardscape and neighbor relations. -
Leyland Cypress
Fast but disease-prone; short lifespan in our climate. -
Ginkgo (female trees)
Spectacular fall color, but messy fruit—choose male cultivars only.
When to Plant in the DMV
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Best: Fall (Sept–Nov) — warm soil, cool air = strong root growth.
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Second best: Early spring — plant before heat sets in.
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Summer planting: Possible with diligent watering and mulch.
Watering & Care (Low-Maintenance Starts Here)
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Year 1: 1–1.5″ water/week (rain + irrigation). Deep, infrequent soakings.
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Mulch: 2–3″ ring, not touching trunks.
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Pruning: Late winter for structure; light deadheading on flowering shrubs after bloom.
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Fertilizer: Focus on soil health (compost) vs. quick salts. Test soil before amending.
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Deer pressure: If your area is deer-heavy, protect young plants and choose deer-resistant species.
Budget Playbook (Good → Better → Best)
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Good (Weekend Refresh): Two accent shrubs + fresh mulch + edge beds = immediate photo uplift.
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Better (Curb Appeal Plan): 1 small ornamental tree, 5–7 shrubs, foundation bed redesign, path lighting.
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Best (Value Build): 1–2 shade trees (sited for energy savings), evergreen screen for privacy, four-season color layers, irrigation zones.
Quick Curb-Appeal Recipe (One Weekend)
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Pick one ornamental tree for the front corner (redbud or ‘Limelight’ hydrangea tree form).
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Add evergreen anchors (inkberry holly) at the foundation corners.
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Layer 3 flowering shrubs (sweetspire/summersweet) under windows.
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Tuck in pollinator perennials (echinacea/rudbeckia) and fresh mulch.
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Finish with simple path lighting and a clean edge.
How This Translates to Higher Offers
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Listings with mature trees and tidy beds photograph better, get more clicks, higher showing-to-offer conversion, and communicate “well-cared-for.”
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Buyers perceive privacy + outdoor living as premium features—especially in close-in DC and NOVA.
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Thoughtful planting around patios, decks, and fences expands “usable square footage” outdoors.
Ready for a “Curb Appeal Audit”?
At CENTURY 21 Envision, we help you choose DMV-smart trees and shrubs that look great on day one and perform for years.
Our Services (DC • MD • VA):
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Pre-List Landscape Strategy: What to plant now vs. later for the best ROI.
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Buyer Consults: We evaluate yards for shade potential, privacy options, drainage, HOA limits.
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Pro Network: Trusted arborists, landscapers, and irrigation pros.
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Photo + Video Marketing: We showcase outdoor spaces that make buyers linger (and book showings).
Let’s plan a landscape that adds value, cuts maintenance, and sells the lifestyle.
Reggie Butler
Broker/Owner, CENTURY 21 Envision
1318 Crain Hwy, Bowie, MD 20716
240-938-1244 | reggiebutler333@gmail.com
C21Envision.net