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indian laurel house plant

indian laurel house plant Buy Indian Laurel Fig Phoenix, AZ | Ficus

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Description

indian laurel house plant Buy Indian Laurel Fig Phoenix, AZ | FicusPhoenix's #1 Column Privacy Tree Indian Laurel Fig (Ficus Nitida) Indian Laurel Fig Column (Ficus microcarpa nitida) is the most planted privacy column across the Phoenix Valley. It grows 23 feet per year, holds a lush evergreen canopy year round, and thrives through punishing Arizona summers without flinching. Whether you're screening a block wall in Scottsdale, building a formal privacy hedge in Gilbert, or lining a driveway in Chandler the Indian

Phoenix's #1 Column Privacy Tree — Indian Laurel Fig (Ficus Nitida)

Indian Laurel Fig Column (Ficus microcarpa nitida) is the most-planted privacy column across the Phoenix Valley. It grows 2–3 feet per year, holds a lush evergreen canopy year-round, and thrives through punishing Arizona summers without flinching. Whether you're screening a block wall in Scottsdale, building a formal privacy hedge in Gilbert, or lining a driveway in Chandler — the Indian Laurel Fig gets the job done.

Indian Laurel Fig Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Ficus microcarpa nitida
Common Names Indian Laurel Fig, Ficus Nitida, Column Ficus
Mature Height 25–35 feet
Mature Width 8–15 feet
Growth Rate Fast — 2–3 feet per year in Phoenix
Sun Full sun to partial shade. Handles intense reflected heat from walls and pavement.
Water Moderate first year; drought-tolerant once established.
USDA Zones 9–11 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a)
Soil Well-draining. Adapts to Arizona caliche soils.
Foliage Evergreen — dense, glossy dark green leaves year-round
Root System Aggressive — keep 6–10 ft from foundations, pools, and underground pipes

Indian Laurel Fig Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Column Privacy Walls & Hedges

The column form of Ficus nitida is the go-to privacy solution for luxury Phoenix Valley properties. Planted 3–5 feet apart, they grow together into a seamless green wall that screens neighbors, street views, and road noise. Unlike block walls, a Ficus column hedge softens hardscape with living, year-round greenery that only gets better with age.

How many plants do you need?

  • 20 ft fence line — 5–7 plants
  • 40 ft fence line — 10–14 plants
  • 60 ft fence line — 15–20 plants
  • 80 ft fence line — 20–27 plants

Formal Driveway & Entry Columns

Planted symmetrically along driveways or flanking entry gates, Indian Laurel Figs create the classic Scottsdale estate look. Their naturally upright form requires only light trimming to maintain a crisp, architectural silhouette. Pair with Desert Spoon or Agave at the base for a clean, modern finish.

Pool Area Privacy & Perimeter Screening

Indian Laurel Fig is a popular pool-side privacy tree for Mesa, Tempe, and Peoria homeowners — but it requires careful placement. Keep the tree at least 8–10 feet from the pool shell and water lines to prevent root intrusion. Planted along a back or side fence beyond that buffer, it delivers fast, dense screening without messy leaf drop into the pool. At the base, pair with Texas Sage or Ruellia for color at eye level while Ficus columns do the heavy lifting above the fence line.

Commercial & HOA Screening

Indian Laurel Fig is the most common evergreen tree used in Phoenix HOA common areas, commercial properties, and parking lot perimeters. It's fast, formal, and requires only quarterly trimming to stay sharp. Its tolerance for reflected heat off concrete and asphalt makes it ideal where other trees fail.

Best Time to Plant Indian Laurel Fig in Phoenix

Fall planting (October–November) is ideal. The soil stays warm for root development while cooler air reduces transplant stress. Fall-planted Ficus gets 6–8 months of root growth before its first Phoenix summer — dramatically improving survival and first-year establishment. Spring (February–April) is the second-best window. Avoid summer planting if possible — Indian Laurel Fig is sensitive to transplant shock in extreme heat and may defoliate if planted when temperatures exceed 105°F.

How to Plant Indian Laurel Fig

  1. Dig wide, not deep — 2–3x the root ball width, same depth as the root ball
  2. Check for caliche — break through any hardpan layer with a pick or bar to ensure drainage
  3. Backfill with native soil — a light 20% organic blend is fine; avoid heavy amendment
  4. Spacing — 3–5 ft apart for privacy hedge; 10–15 ft for individual accent trees
  5. Water basin — build a 3–4 inch soil ring around the root zone to direct water to roots
  6. Mulch — 2–3 inches of bark or gravel mulch to retain soil moisture

Watering Indian Laurel Fig in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

  • Weeks 1–2: Every 1–2 days, deep and slow (20–30 minutes)
  • Month 1–2: Every 3–4 days
  • Month 3–6: Every 7–10 days (5–7 days in peak summer heat)
  • After Year 1: Every 10–14 days in summer; every 3–4 weeks in winter

Drip Irrigation

Place emitters 24–36 inches from the trunk. Use 2–3 emitters per tree at 2–4 gallons per hour. Established Indian Laurel Figs are more drought-tolerant than most people expect — consistent deep watering produces denser foliage and faster privacy coverage.

How fast does Indian Laurel Fig grow in Phoenix?
Indian Laurel Fig adds 2–3 feet per year in good conditions — one of the fastest privacy trees in the Valley. A 15-gallon column planted in fall can reach 12–15 feet within 3–4 growing seasons.

Is Indian Laurel Fig the same as Ficus nitida?
Yes. "Ficus nitida" is the trade name used in Arizona nurseries for the columnar form of Ficus microcarpa. Both names refer to the same plant. The column variety is selected for its narrow, upright growth — ideal for privacy hedges rather than the wide-spreading tree form.

Are the roots invasive?
Indian Laurel Fig has an aggressive root system. Keep it at least 6–10 feet from foundations, underground pipes, pools, and sidewalks. When planted in open landscape areas with drip irrigation, roots tend to stay in the watered zone and cause minimal disruption.

Can Indian Laurel Fig handle Phoenix summer heat?
Yes — Ficus is one of the most heat-tolerant evergreen trees available for Phoenix. It handles reflected heat from block walls, pavement, and stucco. USDA Zones 9–11 cover all of the Phoenix metro including Scottsdale, Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert, and Tempe.

How often does it need to be trimmed?
For a maintained column shape, plan on 2–4 trims per year. One in spring (March–April) and one in fall (September–October) is the minimum. For a manicured look in formal driveways or commercial settings, quarterly trimming keeps the columns crisp.

You May Also Like

  • Green Hopseed Bush — Fast-growing privacy hedge with a softer, natural look. Great alternative where Ficus roots are a concern.
  • Italian Cypress — Narrow, spire-like evergreen perfect for tight spaces, entries, and Mediterranean-style homes.
  • Texas Sage — Low, colorful shrub that pairs beautifully at the base of Ficus columns for color and texture contrast.
  • Desert Spoon — Architectural accent with striking form; complements the formal column look of Indian Laurel Fig hedges.
  • Blue Palo Verde — Arizona's state tree — a flowering canopy tree that pairs well where you want height with seasonal color.

How Many Indian Laurel Fig Do I Need?

For a solid column privacy wall, space plants about 3 to 4 ft on center so the canopies fuse into one continuous green screen. Use this run-length guide:

Fence line Columns needed (3 to 4 ft on center)
20 ft 5 to 7
40 ft 10 to 14
60 ft 15 to 20
80 ft 20 to 27

For driveway or entry accents, space single columns 10 to 15 ft apart. Whatever the layout, keep the trunks 6 to 10 ft off pools, foundations, sidewalks, and underground pipes to stay clear of the aggressive roots.

Indian Laurel Fig Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb to Apr): Vigorous new flush of glossy green growth and the best first trim of the year. Strong spring planting window in warming soil.
  • Summer (May to Sep): Holds dense evergreen foliage right through reflected heat off walls and pavement. One of the few screens that does not flinch at 110-plus degree days, as long as water stays steady. Avoid planting new trees in peak heat.
  • Fall (Oct to Nov): Prime planting season and a good second trim. Roots establish fast in warm soil ahead of winter.
  • Winter (Dec to Jan): Stays green and screening through the cool season. Frost-sensitive in a hard freeze (leaf burn or partial defoliation below about 25 degrees F), but established trees releaf in spring. Cover young plants on the coldest nights.

At a Glance

✔ Heat-Loving (Reflected-Heat Tolerant)   ✔ Drought-Tolerant   ✔ Evergreen

Plant It With

  • Green Hopseed: softer natural-form hedge for spots where Ficus roots are a concern.
  • Italian Cypress: narrow spire evergreen that pairs with the formal column look.
  • Texas Sage: colorful low shrub for the base of a Ficus column hedge.
  • Desert Spoon: architectural accent that finishes a clean, modern column line.

Is Indian Laurel Fig Right for Your Yard?

Indian Laurel Fig is the workhorse choice for fast, formal, evergreen privacy in full sun and reflected heat, with well-drained soil and room to keep the trunks well off hardscape. It is not a fit if you want a no-trim plant or have tight clearances near pools, foundations, or pipes, since it needs regular shaping and has aggressive roots.

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KAB
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The series is long, but Ms. Wolfhart does a fantastic job of weaving this tale while bringing so much to the characters. Surprises and plot twists along the way to keep you intrigued. There is some graphic sex, but is no way the focal point. Grammar was excellent (a rare find with a lot of self publishers) with only a few noted errors. I rarely give 4 stars, let alone 5.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2021
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Elisa
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 3
Sadly, DNF
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I read this thru KU. I LOVED the synopsis. And then I began reading... and it was a DNF at 68% after picking it up and putting it down several times because I really loved the main female character. *****SPOILERS***** Pros: The world is unique, intriguing and fun. The primary female character is bad-a** but not a b*tech or a mary sue. The primary female has depth. I really want to know what happens to her even tho it's been weeks and I don't remember her name. The villains to the point I read are pretty good -- an ever present threat of mysterious and possibly many culprits. Cons: Way, way too many points of view. I stopped counting at 7. It's the prime reason why I don't care about most of the characters or remember their names even when I like them. There's just too many points of view so almost none of the characters have enough book space for the author to properly develop them. This literally killed the book for me. Actually it killed my desire to read. For weeks. The main male is more villain than hero. He agreed to marry the main female then locks her up & eschews her for her sister, all while bad mouthing her as unfit to rule when he never spent any time with her getting to know her. He is actually unfit to rule as he is blind to the woes of his own kingdom and starts off a peace mission to secure a ceasefire through marriage by murdering an inn full of people in her country for no real reason. Plus, he constantly makes promises he does not keep. And it's gross of him to pine for the sister behind the main female's back. ***** As much as I really wanted to see what happened to the main female character, it wasn't enough for me to keep trying to slog thru this book. There was a lot of potential here that just fell short. Hence, 3 stars.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2021
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This book is one that just builds and builds and then surprises you to no end. You may think you know the villains and then you are jolted in another direction. Princess Reyna is a real gem, strong of character, a fierce fighter, and loyal to her family and kingdom. Just when you think she and Lorcan, well you know, the plot is flipped. Can't wait to see where this goes in book two.
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Kindle Customer Maureen
Massapequa, US
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This was a slow moving book. Lots of character pov chapters, lots of superfluous descriptions and endless courtly appearances stalled this book to start. Once you get into the heart of the story, it takes off. Before you know it the book is done. My favorite character is Reyna. She is so strong. She is true to herself. She gets into a lot of trouble with her headstrong ways but it's entertaining. I have high hopes for Lorcan. He is honorable to a fault. Thane had turned out to be better than I thought but i still don't like him. Eislin is useless. Great plot twists at the end. I'm looking forward too book 2.
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Faifre6
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
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