SKU: 64705408108
japanese blueberry variegated schefflera arboricola

japanese blueberry variegated schefflera arboricola Japanese Blueberry Tree (Elaeocarpus Decipiens)

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Description

japanese blueberry variegated schefflera arboricola Japanese Blueberry Tree (Elaeocarpus Decipiens)Transform Your Landscape with Year Round Evergreen Beauty The Japanese Blueberry Tree is an elegant evergreen tree for homeowners who want privacy, structure, and year round appeal without a fussy landscape routine. With dense foliage, bronze new growth, fragrant blooms, and upright growth, this tree can quickly make a California property feel more mature, finished, and private. Known botanically as Elaeocarpus decipiens, the Japanese blueberry brings

Transform Your Landscape with Year-Round Evergreen Beauty

The Japanese Blueberry Tree is an elegant evergreen tree for homeowners who want privacy, structure, and year round appeal without a fussy landscape routine. With dense foliage, bronze new growth, fragrant blooms, and upright growth, this tree can quickly make a California property feel more mature, finished, and private.

Known botanically as Elaeocarpus decipiens, the Japanese blueberry brings a polished look to entryways, property borders, gardens, and screening projects. It is especially useful in Southern California and other mild climates where an attractive, low maintenance evergreen can thrive with the right sunlight exposure, soil preparation, and regular water during establishment.

Why You’ll Love It

  • Evergreen Beauty – Japanese blueberry foliage stays green through winter, with bronze colored leaves emerging in spring, maturing to shiny dark green, and older leaves sometimes turning brilliant reddish-orange before falling.

  • Low Maintenance – Once established, this blueberry tree has low maintenance requirements, needing moderate care, proper watering, and pruning about once a year at the start of the growing season, typically in late February or early March.

  • Perfect Privacy Screen – Dense foliage and an upright growth habit make Japanese blueberry trees highly effective as privacy hedges, natural windbreaks, and property borders, similar in function to a Fern Pine hedge for evergreen privacy.

  • Wildlife Friendly – Fragrant white flowers attract bees, butterflies, and other pollinators, much like many flowering trees suited to California gardens, while inedible blue-black berries provide a food source for local birds.

  • Heat and Cold Tolerant – This cold hardy tree thrives best in USDA Hardiness Zones 8 through 11 and prefers milder winter climates, making it adaptable for many California landscapes and a great complement to other evergreen trees for year-round privacy.

What Makes It Different

Most privacy trees are either too sparse, too fast-growing to control, or too demanding to keep shaped. The Japanese blueberry tree offers a more refined option: an attractive evergreen canopy, compact form, and year-round color that works in both manicured and casual landscape designs.

Japanese Blueberry Tree has these different attributes:

  • Dense Canopy Formation – Japanese blueberry trees can be effectively used as privacy hedges because their dense foliage and upright growth habit create a fuller, cleaner screen than many shrubs or open-branching trees.

  • Unique Foliage Color – Bronze colored leaves emerge in spring, mature into glossy green foliage, and older leaves may shift to red or orange before dropping, giving the tree seasonal interest through spring, summer, fall, and winter.

  • Compact Growth Habit – These trees can be planted as close as 4 feet from a house, making them suitable for small spaces while still providing privacy.

Japanese blueberry trees are also versatile. They can be used as specimen trees, backdrop plantings, or in natural groupings due to their compact form and dense foliage, just like many other landscape trees that add structure and value. They can be shaped into formal topiary forms or left to grow naturally, making them suitable for both manicured estates and relaxed garden settings.

How To Grow Japanese Blueberry Trees

  1. Step 1 – Site Selection and Planting
    Choose a location with full sun to partial shade. Japanese blueberry trees prefer at least six hours of direct sunlight per day to thrive. Plant in rich, fertile, well drained soil, and when planting Japanese blueberry trees, it is recommended to add organic peat humus or top soil mixed with composted cow manure to the planting hole.

  2. Step 2 – Establishment Care
    Water regularly until the tree is established. Watering should be deep and frequent to establish a healthy root system, aiming to soak the ground 24 to 36 inches deep, but avoid overwatering. The tree needs rich, fertile, and well-draining soil and is sensitive to alkaline soils which can cause leaf chlorosis, so compost and soil amendments are important in many California yards.

  3. Step 3 – Mature Growth
    Over several months and seasons, the tree develops a dense canopy, fragrant flowers, and decorative dark blue to blue-black fruit. The Japanese blueberry tree provides year-round color and interest, with its evergreen foliage and seasonal flowers attracting pollinators, which enhances the biodiversity of the landscape and delivers many of the same instant-impact benefits as mature trees for immediate landscape privacy and shade.

Short, consistent care is the key. Water Japanese blueberry trees regularly, ensuring to soak the ground 24 to 36 inches deep to establish a healthy root system, but avoid overwatering.

Tree Details

  • Scientific Name: Elaeocarpus decipiens

  • Common Name: Japanese blueberry, Japanese blueberry tree, blueberry tree

  • Botanical Group: Genus Elaeocarpus; often referred to as Japanese blueberry Elaeocarpus

  • Mature Size: Common landscape size is about 25-35 feet tall, 15-20 feet wide

  • Growth Rate: Moderate to slow; Japanese blueberry trees are slow growers, typically reaching a height of 15 to 20 feet over time

  • Soil Requirements: Rich, acidic soil preferred; amend alkaline soils with compost because alkaline soil can cause leaf chlorosis

  • Drainage: Requires well drained soil and should not sit in waterlogged ground

  • Sunlight Exposure: Best in full sun with at least six hours of direct sun per day; also tolerates partial shade

  • Spacing: 4-5 feet apart for screens, 8+ feet for individual specimens

  • Bloom Time: Summer fragrant white flowers, often beginning around late spring in mild climates

  • Fruit: Produces inedible blue-black berries, which attract local birds

  • Fertilization: Fertilization for Japanese blueberry trees is recommended three times a year-in spring, summer, and autumn-with a high-quality granular fertilizer

  • Pruning: Japanese blueberry trees should be pruned about once a year at the start of the growing season, typically in late February or early March

  • Maintenance Note: The tree sheds older red leaves and dark winter berries throughout the year, necessitating some maintenance if planted near clean areas, especially when paired with low-maintenance edging shrubs like Globe Japanese Boxwood for structured borders

Native to parts of East Asia, including Japan and China, this tree is valued in California, Florida, and other mild climates for its adaptable nature, attractive branches, and refined evergreen form. In many landscapes, it’s combined with other adaptable evergreens such as Fern Pine trees used for shade and screening. While it is often considered relatively clean and manageable, no living plant is completely pest free; watch for signs of stress, disease, dying leaves, or unusual leaf drop, especially if the tree has lost vigor from poor soil or overwatering.

Who It’s For

Ideal for:

  • California homeowners seeking elegant privacy screening

  • Property owners wanting low-maintenance evergreen trees

  • Landscaping projects requiring mature, sophisticated plantings that might also include statement trees like California Pepper and other featured trees

  • Anyone looking to create natural windbreaks or property borders

If you want a formal hedge, a single specimen tree, or a natural privacy screen along property lines, Japanese blueberry fits beautifully. When grown as shrubs, Japanese blueberry trees can create a natural privacy screen along property lines, enhancing both privacy and aesthetics.

It is a strong choice for homeowners who want a plant with evergreen foliage, seasonal flowers, wildlife value, and room to be trimmed, shaped, or allowed to grow naturally with age, especially when sourced from a full-service nursery offering privacy and evergreen trees.

Frequently Asked Questions

How close can I plant to my house?
Japanese blueberry trees can be planted as close as 4 feet from a house, making them suitable for small spaces while still providing privacy. For hedges, space trees about 4-5 feet apart; for individual specimens, allow 8+ feet of room.

How long until it provides privacy?
Japanese blueberry is a moderate to slow grower, so privacy depends on the starting size, spacing, sunlight exposure, and care. Larger specimens provide faster results, while smaller trees may take several months to several years to fill in.

Does it work in my California climate?
Yes, in many areas. It thrives best in USDA Hardiness Zones 8 through 11 and prefers milder winter climates. It performs especially well in Southern California when planted in full sun, well drained soil, and watered regularly until established.

What about maintenance?
Maintenance is simple but not zero. Prune about once a year in late February or early March, fertilize three times a year in spring, summer, and autumn with a high-quality granular fertilizer, and water deeply during establishment. Older leaves may turn red before dropping, and dark winter berries can create some litter near patios, pools, or walkways.

Are the berries edible?
No. The fruit is ornamental only. The tree produces inedible blue-black berries, which attract local birds and support wildlife in the garden.

Ready to Create Your Privacy Paradise?

Stop waiting for sparse screening trees or dealing with high-maintenance hedge solutions. Choose Japanese Blueberry Tree from our Japanese blueberry tree and hedge selection and transform your landscape with elegant evergreen foliage, fragrant blooms, pollinator activity, and dense privacy that looks refined year round.

Yardwork can help with expert plant selection, consultation, and soil testing so your Japanese blueberry trees are planted in the right light, amended soil, and spacing for long-term growth.

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SKU: 64705408108

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Stephanie
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
An action-packed dark romantasy
Format: Kindle
I loved this book! Queen of Roses is an Arthurian-inspired dark romantasy that is the first book in the Blood of Fae series. The story follows Morgan, the princess of Camelot who is rumored to be part fae. Fueled by prejudiced hatred and a mistrust of fae blood, Morgan’s abusive father strips her of her birthright and hands it to her half-brother, Arthur. Instead of becoming queen, Morgan is commanded to join the temple of the goddesses when she comes of age. However, Arthur turns into a psychopathic, power-hungry, fae-hating king as he ages. He develops malevolent plans and commands Morgan to find an ancient weapon with legendary power. Although Morgan is wary of Arthur’s intentions, she embraces the opportunity to go on a journey and potentially change her fate. The story picks up from there and we follow Morgan on her quest to find the ancient relic. It’s full of high stakes adventure, mystery, tension, banter, forced proximity, hidden magic, self discovery, and betrayal. This first installment of the series intricately develops the world building and character development. There’s little romance in this book, but it is evident that it is a slow burn that will continue to develop throughout the remainder of the series. Overall, I loved the world building, the epic fantasy, Morgan’s journey of self discovery, and all of the twists and turns that set the stage for the future installments. I can’t wait to see what happens next!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2024
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AlynReads
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 4
Arthurian Fae Quest…say less.
Format: Kindle
A fae centered Arthurian tale unlike any I’ve read so far. The author did a great job at descriptive world building, with scenes easily playing out in my minds eye. There was plenty of action, suspense, and even a touch of horror. An enemies to lovers, slow burn romance, a quest, with plot twist and turns aplenty. There was a love triangle, which I’m not usually a fan of but, it played out well in this story line. The FMC, Morgan Pendragon, was so blatantly naïve, yet I typically expect as much in a ‘book one’ of a series, especially one that features a fairly sheltered princess. I was happy to read that in spite of this, she still showed a strong sense of morals, fire, and spine. Now our MMC? Kairos Draven, aka Void’s Edge. Oh, how I’m a sucker for a smoking’ hot grumpy warrior alpha with a witty mouth, and a strong sense of “touch her and die” attitude, so you know who held all my cards. That ending? Just made me swoon all the harder. Now add a battlecat that rivals the size of a horse…and well Ms. Briar Boleyn you have well and truly stolen my heart. I’m excited to see where the story goes from here, and follow along to see more of the characters growth. I went into this story fairly blind, and I think I enjoyed it all the more because of it. Once the story got going, it had me in an absolute chokehold and it was difficult to put down.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2024
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Ariel
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 3
Not a bad start
Format: Kindle
3 stars Thank you Netgalley and Briar Boleyn for the ARC! A camelot/king Arthur retelling with fae. I was hooked by the idea of this book immediately and was eager to jump into this world. • slow burn • enemies to lovers • who did this to you Morgan Pendragon watched her mother die by her father's hand when she was just eight years old, hiding under the bed. Morgan is believed to have the tainted blood of the fae in her veins and is cast aside so that her fathers illegitimate son, Arthur, can become the king. She's seen his cruel treatment of the fae firsthand, so when he sends her on a journey to find a fae weapon she seizes the opportunity to do more with her life. Along the way, she finds more than she could have imagined. I don't know a whole lot about King Arthur and Camelot but I had a lot of fun with this story! The plot has some similar tropes to popular romantasy books (From blood and ash) but there's enough originality here that it doesn't feel like I'm reading a copy. I liked how the fae were different in appearance than what is typical in most fantasy books I've read. In this book they have blue hair, violet skin and a wide range of other characteristics. I thought that the world building was easy to follow and I could easily immerse myself into this world. After reading the blurb I kept wondering when she was going to go on the journey to find Excalibur and it doesn't happen until around the 45% mark. The story is a bit slow at times but starts to pick up once they begin their journey to find Excalibur. The John Wick style Inn was a fun concept that I enjoyed reading about. There are a lot of similarities to this and FBAA and I would have liked to have it be a little more different, but I'm hoping book two will have the story turn into something of its own. Overall I enjoyed reading this story and I'm looking forward to reading book two especially after that ending.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2023
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Kate
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
A tale beautifully told!
Format: Kindle
That's what this was. Once again, Natalia Jaster spins a magical fable of passion and wonder, dazzling me with her poetic prose. I've been looking forward to discovering this new world ever since the author announced her next series. Needless to say, I do not feel disappointed at all. Jaster's world-building is top notch, and the universe of Dark Fables unfurls before the reader in all its alluring possibilities as the story goes on. Faerie lore in this book nods towards the traditional - Fae cannot lie but their deceitfulness is notwithstanding, Fae are immortal but not invincible, they love riddles, bargains and a good bawdy revel. Yet, there is an original spin to it, and I love how the Fae are portrayed by the author. Horrifically beautiful and just plain horrific, decidedly n o t human, yet not immune to the full range of human emotions and behaviours. Blue-skinned, covered with fur, antlers, wings and horns, they are not barely a mirror image of unusually pretty humans, only immortal. They're Vicious Faeries. And I L-O-V-E it! Then, there are the characters. Both Lark and Cerulean are extremely likeable - more than that, actually! Why do I even limit myself to these lukewarm expressions?! I simply adored them, Lark especially. She captured my heart with her free spirit and boisterous, daring demeanor. Together with Cerelean, they make for an intriguing pair, giving as good as they get. Their cat-and-mouse, human-fae, enemies-to-lovers dance makes for a deliciously captivating story. Their love story has all the enemies-to-lovers goodness one can hope for, with a sparkly red cherry on top that is a mates trope done well. Personally, I've gone from loving to dreading the mates trope in recent years, but I'm still partial to it, if it's executed in a certain way. And I truly loved it here, because it leaned towards reinforcing the idea of choice being the driving factor in love and relationships, rather than fate. Yes, it was still magic, and involved serendipity and mythical bonds, but it made for a background to characters' actions and choices without overpowering them. Lark's and Cerulean's battle of wills and hearts will wreak havoc on your feels, but it will do it while transporting you to a beautiful and treacherous world of Faerie. The wordy descriptions, alliterations and old tales paint a vivid picture of this universe, and I, for one, loved immersing myself in this world. Natalia Jaster has this peculiar writing style - a blend of poetry with profanities, fancy old-time expressions fused with explicit ones. It has its own tempo, might be hard to follow sometimes, but it's so original and never ceases to amaze me. It also makes me greedy. Just finished reading and I already feel this bookworm's itch to get my next fix, which is the upcoming book in this series. I cannot wait to read Juniper and Puck's story, as well as Cove and Elixir's. More than that, and I truly hope I'm not mistaken, I think what Jaster is setting up here is a part of a bigger universe. So yes, I want to get to know The Solitary Forest and The Solitary Deep. But Middle Country, the home to Vicious Faeries, is only 1/3 of the Dark Fables. So please give me The Northern Frosts and The Southern Seas as well. Elves, dragons and all the magic in between. As for "Kiss the Fae" - what more can I say? This one gets a strong merry 4.5 stars from me. If you're a fantasy lover, I can only urge you to join Lark on her journey, to cross the border beyond The Triad into the Faerie, and walk along her through all the terrible marvels of that land. "Don’t look down. Watch your step. (...) Lose your path. Find your way." (P.S. As in, your way straight into the *online* store to buy this book!) *ARC received from the author in exchange for an honest review*
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Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2020
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Ashlee Bree
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 4
A lush, lyrical, and sensual read!
Format: Kindle
FABLES ETERNAL!!! What a viciously lush, mischievous, and sensual read! Just like that, and Natalia Jaster has ensnared me in warm windy knots, enchanting my heart all over again. Since I'm already a fan of her writing, as well as the chimerical way she weaves her fantasy romances in delicious paradox and wordplay, I couldn't wait to soar into this fable. I was looking forward to being entwined in elegant tricks, to being swept up in colorful prose and world-building as well as in verbal sparring that would leave my head spinning with seductive pink hearts. And I have to say, I wasn't at all disappointed. If anything, this story left me floating on air. It tantalized me like the sharp, ticklish, sonorous whips of a summer breeze against my skin. It enveloped me in stunning lyricism and nature's mossy, woefully under-appreciated, arms. I couldn't devour it sooner. Couldn't breathe it in fast enough. I have a partiality for sparkling tales already, for magical worlds and characters that are woven through with arresting detail, passion, wonder--so imagine my delight to be able to settle into this wicked whimsical fairytale with Lark and Cerulean. They are everything wild, everything dazzling - oh, so succulent and fresh in repartee - that you want them to be! I promise you their enemies-to-lovers-to-mates journey is full of all the juicy "loss and longing" stuff that'll jolt you straight into the sky. It'll tack you up there like a star where you can shine down with bewitched admiration and greed. As mortal and faerie respectively, Lark and Cerulean are poised as enemies from the moment she crosses the threshold into Faerie. She's a bawdy mouthy human with a flair for stubbornness, for whips, who just so happens to have a fierce protectiveness of animals in addition to her loved ones. He's a wicked Fae ruler with blue-tinted skin and pointy ears whose words lance, not just drip, with elegant machinations. While Lark's desperate to win this dangerous game she's fallen into with him and reach the mountaintop, bringing her one step closer to rescuing her sisters, whom she loves dearly, Ceruleans's determined to thwart her with riddles and fatal bargains at every turn, with him on his own quest to restore the fauna that were lost during the Trapping (aka a war-of-sorts). What transpires between them is tons of wrangling "one up me, if you dare" fun. Seriously, it's impossible not to get swept up in the thrilling "lark" of it all. And their romance? Well, it's nothing short of feathered serendipity. It's an elaborate dance circling around the edge of chosen circumstance plus desire on top of fate. Whenever Lark and Cerulean are together, sparks fly. They just do. The lustful volleying back-and-forth is what keeps you on the hook. The even teeter between them, though, that's the element which kicks up the intrigue another notch. Heightens the passion between them, the intensity. After all, who doesn't it love it when two diametrically opposed beings (one magical, the other not) end up being well-matched in love AND war? I mean, hubba hubba! Can somebody procure me a leafy fan, please? I'm swoooooning! Their dynamic interplay also explodes into fireworks over and over throughout the story, piercing you with feeling so pointed yet so potent that it lands with the precision of a javelin's tip. Half the time it sneaks up on you. Unraveling expectation. Digging in deeper to reveal hidden meaning or themes. Then, before you know it, before you realize what's happening, you're spirited away with the characters. You're caught up in the majestic audacity of who Lark and Cerulean are, where they're from, and how they've come to fall in love with one another despite it being strictly forbidden. Point blank: it's an incredibly sexy, lyrical, action-packed ride from start to finish! Never has nature felt more provocative, either. I don't know how Jaster accomplished such a feat, but somehow she made wind into the most toe-curlingly erotic element on the planet?? (Like, who needs/wants fingers when there's wind around to compete? 🤣 ) I'm unabashed to say she's likely created a new kink for fantasy romance readers everywhere. So listen to me now, y'all. Hear me when I say "follow the wind." Chase it. Trail after where it blows against your computer keys...or out the door toward the bookstore, the library, or wherever it is you prefer to procure material for reading...because you need to pick up a copy of this immediately. I mean it. Consider it a mandate. *screams in every color of the wind until you heed me* I'm telling you now: there ain't nothing better than this glowing debut into a universe of Vicious Faeries!
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Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2021

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