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Gambel Oak is a smaller oak that only reaches about 30′ tall. It has a round canopy shape and can sometimes form thickets from a deep and extensive root system. Gambel Oak is commonly found in Colorado growing with serviceberry, snowberry and chokecherry.
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Quercus gambelii. Zone: 3. Mature Height: 20-30' Mature Spread: 10-20. Type: Deciduous. Size: Average. Fall Color: Orange. Attributes: Full Sun. Low Water. Xeric. Additional Information: Unique Features: The Gambel oak (too often belittled with the name ‘scrub oak’) is native to the foothill regions of the ‘4 corner’ states.
The Gambel Oak is a native to the southern Rocky Mountains and the southwestern U.S. making it very drought tolerant. It is a small informal, shrub-like tree that can be used as a screen. Its dark green leaves turn to a yellow or reddish brown in late fall.
Plant database entry for Gambel Oak (Quercus gambelii) with 34 images and 45 data details.
Gambel Oak. Gambel oak is native over a wide range in the southwestern U.S. and Mexico, from 4000' to 8000' in elevation. Usually found in dense thickets, its size varies from 5 foot shrubs to 50 foot trees, depending upon available moisture and deer browsing.
Gambel Oak. Quercus gambelii. Size: #10. 15-30 feet high x 12-20 feet wide. Open irregular shape. Zone 3. Full Sun. One of our personal favorites, this native performs at its best in central Wyoming!
The Gambel Oak (Quercus gambelii) is a small- to medium-sized shade tree. It has a rounded and spreading crown and typically lacks a main central trunk beneath the canopy. Its foliage is a dull green with a lighter gray-green underside and made up of deeply cut, 3-6 lobed leaves that sometimes turn red in the fall but