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Magnolia Grandiflora 'Kay Parris' Southern Evergreen Magnolia Tree

Magnolia Grandiflora 'Kay Parris'Southern Evergreen Magnolia Zones 6-10 Β  The Magnolia grandiflora 'Kay Parris' is a compact, evergreen magnolia re...

Magnolia Grandiflora 'Kay Parris' Southern Evergreen Magnolia Tree


Sold out This cultivar is currently unavailable in all sizes.

Magnolia Grandiflora 'Kay Parris' Southern Evergreen Magnolia Tree

This plant is currently sold out

Description

Magnolia Grandiflora 'Kay Parris'
Southern Evergreen Magnolia

Zones 6-10

Β 

The Magnolia grandiflora 'Kay Parris' is a compact, evergreen magnolia reaching 20–25 ft tall with glossy green leaves and bronze undersides. It produces large, fragrant white flowers in summer.Β 

Limited Quantities Available !!Β As we have over a thousand cultivars of Japanese maples, we often do not have many of each cultivar. We recommend that you buy the Japanese maples you want immediately as we often sell out of certain selections

Magnolia Care Guide

Magnolia care for reliable bloom, glossy foliage, and healthy long-lived trees or shrubs.

Zone optimized care Choose your USDA zone General magnolia guidance. Set your USDA zone to tune watering, sun, soil, pruning, and winter notes to your climate.

Magnolias range from compact deciduous flowering shrubs to large evergreen trees. Most prefer fertile, acidic, moist but well-drained soil, protection from harsh wind, and enough sun for strong flowering.

General magnolia guidance

Magnolia hardiness varies widely by species and cultivar. This broad guide covers many landscape magnolias from USDA Zones 4-10; always confirm the exact plant's listed range.

Care essentials

Watering

Magnolias like even moisture, especially while establishing and while flower buds are forming. Water deeply rather than lightly sprinkling.

Tip: Mulch broadly because magnolias have many shallow, fleshy roots that resent drying, mowing, and digging.

Set your zone to show the safest watering rhythm for your climate.

  • Water the root ball and surrounding soil until roots move outward into native soil.
  • Keep soil moist, not waterlogged; magnolias decline in saturated or compacted ground.
  • Use 2 to 4 inches of mulch over a wide area and keep it off the trunk.
  • Container magnolias need frequent checks in summer and winter protection where roots may freeze.

Soil

Most magnolias prefer fertile, acidic, well-drained soil with organic matter. High pH soils can cause chlorosis and weak growth.

Acidic, well-drained soil is the baseline for strong magnolia growth.

  • Plant with the root flare visible and the top of the root ball level with or slightly above grade.
  • Do not dig or cultivate under established magnolias; their shallow roots are easily injured.
  • Avoid lime unless a soil test specifically recommends it.
  • If leaves yellow with green veins, check soil pH, drainage, and root health before fertilizing.

Sunlight

Most magnolias bloom best in full sun, but some smaller or evergreen types appreciate light afternoon shade in hot climates.

Exposure depends on species: deciduous bloomers usually need more sun; heat-edge evergreen types benefit from protection.

  • Full sun means six or more hours of direct light and usually the best flowering.
  • Afternoon shade is useful in hot-summer regions and for newly planted specimens.
  • Strong wind can shred large leaves and break soft branches; sheltered placement helps.
  • Avoid tight spaces near foundations unless the cultivar's mature size is truly compact.

Fertilization

Fertilize only when growth is weak or a soil test indicates low fertility. Magnolias respond well to organic mulch and moderate spring feeding, not heavy nitrogen.

Feed in early spring if needed, especially on sandy or low-fertility soils.

  • Use slow-release balanced fertilizer or an acid-forming product where pH is high.
  • Do not place fertilizer directly against the trunk.
  • Newly planted magnolias usually establish better with water and mulch than with heavy fertilizer.
  • Drought in late summer can reduce next season's bloom; water management matters more than extra feeding.

Pruning and maintenance

Magnolias need minimal pruning. Remove dead, damaged, crossing, or poorly placed branches, and avoid major cuts on old wood unless necessary.

Prune right after flowering for spring-blooming deciduous types; prune evergreen magnolias lightly after bloom or during mild weather.

  • Remove suckers or low limbs only if they conflict with the desired form.
  • Use clean, sharp tools and keep cuts outside the branch collar.
  • Do not shear magnolias into tight hedges unless using a cultivar intended for screening.
  • Avoid repeated digging or edging under the canopy; root damage can cause decline.

Winter and frost protection

Winter issues depend heavily on species. Deciduous spring magnolias often lose flowers to late frost; evergreen types can suffer wind burn and root stress.

Set your zone for frost and winter protection notes.

  • Water during dry autumns so roots enter winter hydrated.
  • Use breathable frost cloth over small trees or shrubs during late freezes; remove once temperatures rise.
  • Do not prune frost-damaged flower buds; simply allow the plant to leaf out.
  • Evergreen magnolias need shelter from drying winter wind in colder parts of their range.

Specific tips

Container growing

Compact magnolias can grow in containers for several years, but they need large pots, drainage, and steady moisture.

Containers are less forgiving than in-ground planting.

  • Use a bark-based, well-draining acidic potting mix.
  • Do not let pots sit in standing water.
  • Choose compact cultivars rather than large shade-tree magnolias.
  • Repot before the plant becomes severely root-bound.

Variety selection

Species choice is the most important magnolia decision.

  • Star, Loebner, and many deciduous hybrids fit colder gardens but may have frost-sensitive spring flowers.
  • Southern magnolia and sweetbay magnolia are better choices for warm, humid regions.
  • Evergreen types need more winter wind protection in cold-edge zones.
  • Check mature size carefully; many magnolias outgrow foundation beds.

Common issues and troubleshooting

Frost-damaged flowers

Brown or limp flowers after a cold snap are common on early-blooming deciduous magnolias.

  • Plant away from frost pockets and early-warming south walls.
  • Use frost cloth on small specimens during late freezes.
  • The plant usually remains healthy even when blooms are lost for one season.

Chlorosis and root stress

Yellow leaves with green veins often indicate high pH, poor drainage, or root damage.

  • Check soil pH and drainage before applying fertilizer.
  • Avoid trenching, digging, or heavy foot traffic under the canopy.
  • Use acid-forming fertilizer only when soil conditions support it.

Scale, leaf spot, and sooty mold

Magnolia scale and related pests can lead to sticky honeydew and black sooty mold on leaves and surfaces below.

  • Inspect stems for scale before treating only the leaves.
  • Improve airflow and reduce stress through correct watering.
  • Treat scale at the correct life stage using horticultural oil or a local extension-recommended product.

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