indian laurel house plant Ficus Nitida (Indian Laurel) Columns For Sale – Yardwork
SKU: 34189190833
indian laurel house plant

indian laurel house plant Ficus Nitida (Indian Laurel) Columns For Sale – Yardwork

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Description

indian laurel house plant Ficus Nitida (Indian Laurel) Columns For Sale – YardworkCreate Instant Privacy with Fast Growing Elegance Ficus Nitida helps California homeowners create a dense, glossy evergreen privacy screen faster than many traditional hedge plants. Also known as Indian Laurel, Indian Laurel Fig, or Ficus microcarpa nitida, this fast growing ficus is prized for transforming exposed property lines, open patios, and street facing yards into private outdoor retreats. With dark green foliage, a clean formal appearance,

Create Instant Privacy with Fast-Growing Elegance

Ficus Nitida helps California homeowners create a dense, glossy evergreen privacy screen faster than many traditional hedge plants. Also known as Indian Laurel, Indian Laurel Fig, or Ficus microcarpa nitida, this fast growing ficus is prized for transforming exposed property lines, open patios, and street-facing yards into private outdoor retreats.

With dark green foliage, a clean formal appearance, and strong performance in full sun to partial shade, Ficus Nitida is ideal when you want a living green wall that provides year-round privacy, shade, and visual structure. In southern california landscapes, the Indian Laurel tree is especially popular for privacy hedges because it handles heat, grows quickly, and can be maintained with regular pruning and trimming.

Why You’ll Love It

  • Instant Privacy Screen – A ficus nitida hedge creates a dense barrier quickly, helping block unwanted views from neighbors, roads, and nearby property lines.

  • Year-Round Beauty – As evergreen trees, Ficus Nitida plants maintain their foliage throughout the year, providing consistent greenery and visual interest in the landscape regardless of the season.

  • Fast Growth Rate – Under optimal conditions, Ficus nitida can add 2 to 3 feet of height annually and can grow up to 30–40 feet tall outdoors, making it a reliable choice when privacy is needed fast.

  • Versatile Landscaping – Use it as a hedge, formal screen, topiary, accent tree, or tall green wall; Ficus Nitida Column, also known as Indian Laurel Column, is especially useful where a narrow vertical structure is preferred.

  • Low Maintenance – Once established, Ficus Nitida is drought-tolerant, highly adaptable, and suited to California’s warm Mediterranean climate with moderate watering, occasional pruning, and well-drained soil.

What Makes It Different

Most privacy plants are either slow-growing, too sparse, or difficult to shape into a solid screen. Compared with many alternatives, including Ligustrum japonicum, Ficus nitida Indian Laurel columns offer a denser appearance, faster coverage, and a more polished evergreen wall when maintained properly.

Ficus Nitida (Indian Laurel) has:

  • Dense Foliage Structure – Its thick, glossy, dark green foliage helps create solid privacy walls, filter airborne pollutants, absorb volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and block out street noise better than many open-branched trees, making it one of the most popular Indian Laurel trees for California landscapes.

  • Adaptable Growth Habit – Ficus Nitida can grow as a wide hedge, formal screen, standard tree, or slender column. Indian Laurel (Ficus microcarpa), including the Ficus Nitida Column, is a popular choice for creating dense privacy screens due to its tall, narrow growth habit, reaching heights of 10 to 30 feet and a width of 3 to 5 feet.

  • California-Proven Performance – Ficus nitida thrives in warm climates and is highly prized for creating lush privacy hedges or elegant topiary. It is tolerant to extreme heat and can thrive in intense summer sun and desert environments, making it suitable for many southern california gardens when planted in the right site.

Tips For Success

  1. Plant in Optimal Location
    Choose a sunny site with full sun to partial shade and enough space away from hardscape, sidewalks, pipes, and the house. Ficus nitida thrives best in full sun to partial shade and requires regular, deep watering during its establishment period.

  2. Establish and Shape
    Water deeply during the first growing seasons, especially through summer heat, and use regular pruning to guide the plant into the desired hedge, screen, or column form. Proper care for evergreen trees includes regular watering, ensuring well-drained soil, and occasional pruning to maintain their shape and health, especially when using evergreen trees for year-round privacy screens.

  3. Enjoy Dense Privacy
    Once established, Ficus Nitida continues to grow into a dense living screen. When planted in rows, Ficus Nitida can form a solid living wall of greenery, making it an effective option for privacy hedges or windbreaks. The plant can also act as a natural windbreak and sound buffer, reducing noise and blocking unwanted views when planted closely.

Plant Details

  • Botanical name: Ficus nitida (Ficus microcarpa nitida)

  • Common names: Indian Laurel, Indian Laurel Fig, Ficus Nitida, Nitida, Indian Laurel Column

  • Mature size: 25–40 feet tall, 25–35 feet wide when grown as a standard landscape tree

  • Column form: Ficus Nitida Column, also known as Indian Laurel Column, is a fast-growing tree that can reach heights of 10 to 30 feet while maintaining a slender width of 3 to 5 feet, making it ideal for creating vertical accents and privacy screens

  • Growth rate: Fast; under optimal conditions, Ficus nitida can add 2 to 3 feet of height annually

  • Sun requirements: Full sun to partial shade; the Ficus Nitida Column thrives in warm climates and is best planted in full sun, making it suitable for Mediterranean and tropical regions where privacy trees are often desired

  • Climate: Ideal for warm, tropical, and Mediterranean conditions; these trees can thrive in a variety of climates, but many species prefer warm, tropical, and Mediterranean conditions, performing best in full sun

  • Hardiness zones: 9–11, ideal for many California landscapes

  • Soil preference: Ficus nitida prefers rich, well-draining sandy or loamy soils and is drought-tolerant once fully established

  • Soil adaptability: Ficus nitida is highly adaptable and establishes easily in various soil types, performing well in sandy, loamy, or poor soils

  • Watering needs: Moderate watering once established; regular, deep watering is recommended while the plant is getting started

  • Best uses: Privacy hedges, formal hedge borders, green wall planting, windbreaks, sound buffer, shade tree, garden structure, and topiary; these are also among the most popular options at our privacy tree nursery

  • Row planting: When planted in rows, Ficus Nitida Column trees can form a solid living wall of greenery, making them a popular choice for privacy hedges and windbreaks

  • Environmental benefits: The thick foliage of Ficus nitida helps to block out street noise and filter airborne pollutants

  • Safety note: Ficus nitida produces a milky, sticky latex sap that can cause skin irritation and is toxic to pets if ingested

  • Root warning: Ficus nitida has a highly aggressive and invasive root system that can crack sidewalks and damage nearby structures

  • Available sizes: 15-gallon, 24-inch box, and 36-inch box sizes are common available through a full-service plant nursery near you.

Who It’s For

Ideal for:

  • California homeowners who want fast privacy without waiting years for a slow-growing screen and may also be comparing options like a Fern Pine privacy hedge

  • Property owners creating formal hedge borders along property lines, patios, driveways, or pool areas

  • Landscapers designing Mediterranean-style gardens with tall, glossy, evergreen structure

  • Homeowners concerned about noise, street views, wind exposure, or a lack of shade who might also consider the versatile Fern Pine tree (Podocarpus gracilior) for similar uses

  • Anyone who wants a low maintenance privacy hedge that can be shaped with regular pruning and enjoys pairing Ficus Nitida with complementary evergreens like Bay Laurel and other screening shrubs

If you want a fast, dense, reliable way to create privacy around your house or garden, Ficus Nitida is a strong choice. It is especially effective when you need a living wall that looks polished, grows quickly, and can continue filling in over time with proper watering, spacing, and pruning.

Frequently Asked Questions

How fast does Ficus Nitida grow?
Ficus Nitida is a fast growing privacy plant. Under optimal conditions, Ficus nitida can add 2 to 3 feet of height annually and can grow up to 30–40 feet tall outdoors. Many homeowners choose larger starting sizes, such as 15-gallon, 24-inch box, or 36-inch box plants, to create privacy faster.

Are the roots invasive?
Yes. Ficus Nitida is known for invasive roots, and Ficus nitida has a highly aggressive and invasive root system that can crack sidewalks and damage nearby structures. The best way to reduce risk is to choose the site carefully, avoid planting too close to hardscape or a house foundation, and use root barriers where recommended.

What maintenance does it require?
Ficus Nitida needs regular, deep watering during establishment, well-drained soil, and regular pruning to maintain the desired size and shape. Once established, it becomes more drought-tolerant and low maintenance, but trimming in spring and as needed during the growing season helps keep the hedge dense, clean, and controlled.

Ready to Create Your Privacy Oasis?

Stop waiting for privacy with slow-growing alternatives. Choose Ficus Nitida for a fast, beautiful, glossy green screen that can add shade, reduce noise, block unwanted views, and bring lasting structure to your landscape.

Yardwork can help you choose the right size, spacing, soil preparation, and planting plan for your property. Schedule a consultation, arrange California delivery, or request soil testing before planting so your Ficus Nitida hedge gets started the right way.

Shipping Notes
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Exchange/Return Notes
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D. Alexander
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 5
Buy this one, forget the rest
This is one of the most powerful handheld electric blowers available. If you're serious about getting the job done quickly, this is the baseline. The next power tier is a gas backpack blower at five times the cost, then an even more powerful backpack, and then four-digit specialty tools from companies like Billy Goat. I bought the Worx because I didn't want to spend three hours raking a half-acre of grass. My trial run was an hour of continuous use with matted wet leaves and driveway sand. It fast became apparent that to be efficient, a blower has to move leaves without being on top of them. Blowing from six inches just makes everything scatter as piles build up. You end up crisscrossing the section you just cleared to deal with the strays. The further your breeze carries, the more direct the flight path of the leaves. This range, and the ability to scour stubborn leaves from the ground, comes from air speed (MPH). At the same time, though, you need a big enough wall of air to move more than one leaf at once. That comes from the size of your pipe opening. The two multiplied together determine your total air volume over a duration, or CFM (cubic feet per minute). In physics-land (with spherical cows and turbulence-free pipes, spared from the icy hand of marketing), CFM is the best measure of a blower's work capacity. MPH, you can change by varying the size of the pipe; a smaller pipe makes a smaller column of air moving at a faster speed (and more impressive advertising), which is why a lot of consumer-class blowers have tiny nozzles. (I'm looking at you, Sun Joe SBJ601E.) But there's a cost to adding MPH: it kills efficiency. The energy to move a volume of air goes up with the square of speed, so if you design your blower for 160 MPH, you'll get half the CFM of a 110 MPH blower from the same power. Something to mull if the blower is powered by a battery. Still, if you know either speed or CFM, and the size of the pipe, you can calculate the other (assuming the manufacturer isn't misleading you by quoting CFM at the fan and MPH at the end of the pipe). To get CFM from MPH and the radius of a round pipe, the calculation is (radius^2)*(mph)*(1.92). That's (1.69^2)(110)(1.92) for this blower's 110 MPH and 3 3/8" pipe, with the result arriving right at the rated number of 600 CFM. Anyway, the Worx has enough volume and speed to blow mounds of wet leaves from six feet and dry ones from ten or more. It's impressively powerful. I was switching arms every few minutes as they wore out from the backward force. Only some really baked-on mud would have benefited from a pipe-reducer attachment. Thanks to ape-like proportions or the secure fit of my spandex leaf-blowing onesie, clothing suction from the rear-directed air intake hasn't been a bother. ALTERNATIVES: I almost bought Toro's highly-rated "Ultra" combination blower to minimize bagging, but the vacuum functionality didn't seem that useful in videos. Maybe it'd be adequate to clean an enclosed deck area or a small yard with a scattering of dry leaves. For a larger yard, it looks like a time sink relative to a standalone mulcher. Likewise the blowing capacity, which, at 410 CFM, trails the Worx by quite a lot. Cordless tools were also tempting. There's a 20V DeWalt people seem to like that's rated at (a perhaps optimistic) 400 CFM. Because it's a similar fan design to the Worx, we can compare power directly. DeWalt's standard battery is 20V (or so we'll stipulate; it's closer to 18V under load) and 5 amp-hours, so we're looking at 100 watt-hours total output. 15 minutes of runtime translates to a sustained draw, best case, of 400W. Assuming 90% efficiency in the brushless motor, that's 360W actually moving air. (When new. Expect a performance drop over time and battery replacements by year three.) Compare this Worx: 12 amps at 120V equates to 1440 watts sustained, in this case feeding a 2-pole AC/DC motor that's perhaps 55% efficient. 12A is close to the maximum a device can reasonably expect from a typical 15A household socket. Even with nearly half of our power lost to heat and noise, the remaining 790W is over double what the DeWalt can manage. It's no coincidence that 600 CFM cordless blowers (Greenworks and Kobalt come to mind) have 80V/2.5Ah batteries with twice the DeWalt's capacity. Their runtime at full tilt? The same fifteen minutes, with three extra pounds to lug around from a chunk of lithium that costs more than the blower it attaches to. And what of gas blowers? The handheld versions have around 1 HP with CFM from 450 to 500. They're usually tuned for higher MPH than the Worx, so they're likely to be a little better with wet leaves and a little worse with dry ones. Backpack blowers up the displacement and make between 1.5 and 5 horsepower. The models that you might find on the back of a professional landscaper can manage nearly 1000 CFM with speeds around 200 MPH. That's a considerable difference, but you pay for it at the checkout and in weight: figure 10 pounds or so for a handheld (relative to 7ish for this unit, plus some cord) and 20 or more for a backpack. As of mid-2020, two other corded blowers are worth a hard look: Toro's F700 and Worx's WG521. The Toro arrived first in 2019 with a hefty 720 CFM rating, a bigger two-arm handle, and a better cord retention mechanism. The WG521 is the response: 800 CFM and 135 MPH (claimed) from a ~4" nozzle, albeit still intended for one arm. All three blowers are beastly and often close in price; pick whichever best channels your inner Tim Allen. ACCESSORIES: A motor this powerful benefits from a thick (low gauge) cord for longer runs. You lose a bit of performance with thinner cord. The generic orange 50-foot extension everyone has is 16-gauge. Feeding a 12A load for 50 feet, it'll have a voltage drop of about 5V. Heavier 14-gauge loses 2.5V on the same run, and industrial 12-gauge, only 1.5V. The scale is linear, so if you double up that 16-gauge cord for a 100-foot run, you'll lop off 10V. How's that play out here? From a short and fat cable (that the cheesy plastic strain-relief piece won't actually accommodate; just tie an overhand knot over the two plugs instead), we'd expect a 1440W draw (12A * 120V, or a bit less because the house wiring itself has some drop). Losing 5V drops the total to 1380W. That's about what I found when I tested the Worx with a watt meter. 12ag / 3 ft = 1423W 14ag / 100 ft = 1352W 16ag / 50 ft = 1351W 16ag / 50 ft + 14ag / 100 ft = 1280W With the progressive thumb dial at the lowest setting, minimum draw was 260W. For shorter runs, disconnect extensions you don't actively need. Every cable sheds a percentage of the energy it carries to heat. As above, skinny cables lose more. Coiled on the ground and coupled with a high-load device like the Worx, they can build up enough heat to start melting insulation, which tends to cause sheepish expressions and insurance claims. This blower is also loud enough to merit hearing protection. On an A-weighted scale (approximating human hearing), measured outdoors from three feet, it makes 82 dB on low and 91 dB on high. Indoors or near a wall, volume jumps by 10 dB and subjectively doubles. While the sound character emulates a vacuum, my Shark only measures 72 dB indoors; you'd have to run over a rat's nest of lamp cords to make one this loud. Amazon has a number of comfortable muffs for less than a Jackson that'll keep your ears intact. You can find electric blowers with more toys, but few that'll get the job done as fast as this one. It's a bargain at the asking price. I'll update if I catch any reliability problems.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2016
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R. Klein
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
Light, and easy to use for blowing leaves
I bought this in the fall of 2025, and found it very easy to use. I also have a Toro blower/vac, that I use to grind up leaves in the fall. While this appliance is only good for blowing leaves, it does a good job of it. It's quieter than the Toro, and considerably lighter in weight. I find it much less fatiguing on the hand than the Toro. It has multiple speeds, so is versatile. You don't ALWAYS want maximum wind from these things, depending on the job and the space. The weight, comfortable handle, balance, and lower noise are the top advantages to this machine. Because this is a corded model, there's no concern over battery life. You can blow the afternoon away without a care. Only time will tell when it comes to durability. 🤞🏻
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Reviewed in the United States on January 13, 2026
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Teng Ma
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
Great Power for the Price
Really impressed with this blower. It’s lightweight, easy to handle, and has plenty of power to clear grass and leaves quickly. Perfect for quick yard cleanups. Definitely worth.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2026
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Over and Under
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
The Black and Decker BESTA510 is a KEEPER plus it's made in the USA 🇺🇲
Style: String Trimmer
Well folks🙂 I have to tell you this has been a nice weed eater that cuts really good and it's LIGHTWEIGHT and it's powerful👍 and at a PRICE that can't be beat...it's way more powerful than some battery and electric weed eaters that I have.. like a Ryobi... And supposedly a commercial grade Ryobi $200 😤.. Anyway 🙂 This electric weed eater is very good and I'll take that PEPSI challenge any day 😀 when comparing it to some other weed eaters PLUS it doesn't USE LINE like other electric weed eaters that I've used.. at least that's been my experience.. This is a KEEPER weed eater from Black & Decker👍....it handles tall grass and even some hedge... though it probably shouldn't be used for hedge but it's TOUGH 😀 and better than any battery weed eater I used especially with the power and cutting... The power alone and convenience of NOT rushing through the job with the battery pack and charging ect imo is worth the cord drag 🙂... and much better than a battery weed eater or other electric weed eaters.. This just cuts better 👍... With MORE power consistently and constantly through the whole job... So in conclusion 🙂 the Black & Decker BESTA510 weed eater in my opinion is a KEEPER and this model has been around for a while which speaks for itself not to mention Black & Decker has been around for years.... This weed eater OVERALL (pound for pound ) is a solid performer with many mostly liking this weed eater and Black & Decker products overall.. Thanks for reading🙂.. I hope my review helps... and Did I mention It's made in the USA...🇺🇲..🙂...
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Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2025
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Verified Purchase
Lucas B Hager
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
No problems all the way to the end of the spool
Style: String Trimmer
I had an old Greenworks string trimmer that I found in the basement after I moved into my new home. Maybe it was just old, but the auto-feed didn't work well, the line was always running out, and I spent more time rewinding the spool than cutting down weeds. I had almost lost my faith in string trimmers entirely. You can spend $300 on one, but how much better are they? I didn't know. This Black & Decker was only $50, and although it's corded, my roommate convinced me it was worth not having to do the dance of recharging batteries, plus having full 110v power. Some (easy) assembly required out of the box, and this thing was basically plug & play. I did read through the owner's manual first, which gave amateur me some confidence through a few helpful tips. I use it not only for cutting down weeds, but also for cleaning out weeds from the cracks in my sidewalk, and the edger wheel is very helpful for that. More importantly, the line had no problems all the way to the end of the spool. Faith restored, there are good string trimmers in the world. That being said, be aware that the line it comes with isn't very long. My lawn is medium-size, and it ran out about halfway through. The Black & Decker replacement spools are $10 / 30 ft (much longer), but it goes through line, so this could really add up. Replacing the spool was easy, and I was able to finish my lawn with plenty line to spare. A quick search on Amazon reveals off brand spools at $15 / 12-pack. I haven't tested them yet, but the price difference is so great that I'm going to give them a chance.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2023

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