My Arbor Buddy is a delivery-only vendor of large, nursery-grown landscape trees shipped by freight nationwide. We serve homeowners in Gila County, Arizona (AZ) with shade trees, evergreens, flowering ornamentals, and palms. Every tree is matched to the county's USDA hardiness zone before it ships, so you see only trees that thrive in 8a to 9b.
Featured Trees
| Tree | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Slender Silhouette Sweetgum | Shade and canopy | Extremely narrow columnar form fits tight spaces while giving dense shade. Hardy in 8a-9b. |
| Carolina Sapphire Arizona Cypress | Privacy screening | Blue foliage and drought tolerance make it ideal for dry parts of Gila County. Grows fast for a screen. |
| Hearts A'fire Eastern Redbud | Flowering and curb appeal | Purple leaves and pink blooms add color in spring and summer. Thrives in the zone range. |
| Mediterranean Fan Palm | Small spaces and accents | Clumping, drought-tolerant fan palm that stays compact. Perfect for courtyards and entryways. |
| Jelly Palm | Palms and tropicals | Blue feather palm with edible fruit. Handles the warmer end of the zone and adds a tropical look. |
Other suitable categories for Gila County include cold-hardy citrus, crape myrtles, and desert-adapted oaks. These are also available in the My Arbor Buddy catalog.
Choosing Trees by Goal
- Shade and canopy: If you need a large shade tree, the Slender Silhouette Sweetgum provides a narrow canopy that matures in about 15 years. For broader shade, consider a chinquapin oak or desert willow.
- Privacy and screening: Evergreen options like Carolina Sapphire Arizona Cypress give year-round screening. Columnar junipers also work well in the dry climate of Gila County.
- Flowering and curb appeal: Hearts A'fire Eastern Redbud, crape myrtles, and desert willows produce vibrant blooms without heavy watering. They thrive in the warm zone.
- Small spaces and accents: Palms like Mediterranean Fan Palm and Jelly Palm fit tight lots. Japanese maples in filtered shade and compact ornamental grasses also suit smaller yards.
Climate and Hardiness Zone Fit in Gila County
Gila County spans USDA hardiness zones 8a to 9b, meaning winter lows range from 10°F to 25°F. The county includes both cooler uplands and warmer low-elevation areas. Trees must handle these occasional cold snaps while thriving in hot, dry summers.
Property sizes vary from sprawling rural lots to smaller suburban parcels in communities like Payson and Globe. Many homes in the rural fringe have more room for larger shade trees, while tighter lots in developed areas favor palms and narrow columnar forms.
Drought-tolerant evergreens such as Arizona cypress and palms tend to perform best across the county. Deciduous shade trees that tolerate periodic cold also do well, especially with supplemental watering.
What to Expect: Freight Delivery and the Alive & Thrive Guarantee
My Arbor Buddy ships large, nursery-grown trees directly to your property in Gila County via freight. The trees arrive at a usable landscape size, ready for planting.
Freight delivery requires a truck with a lift gate. Make sure the driveway and turnaround space can accommodate a large truck. Someone needs to be available to receive the tree and inspect it.
Every tree comes with a 1-Year Alive & Thrive Guarantee. If a tree does not survive its first year, we replace it free of charge. Trees are zone-matched to 8a-9b before shipping to give them the best start.
How Gila County Compares to Other Areas
Maricopa County, Arizona (AZ), Maricopa lies mostly in zones 9b to 10a, with hotter summers and milder winters. While palms and crape myrtles thrive in both counties, Gila County's cooler zones allow for more deciduous shade trees and flowering redbuds that struggle in extreme low-desert heat.
Jefferson County, Kentucky (KY), Jefferson County is in zone 6b to 7a, much colder than Gila County. Hardy oaks, maples, and crabapples are common there, but palms and warm-zone evergreens like Arizona cypress would not survive Kentucky's winters. Gila County's warmer zone opens up palm and redbud choices unavailable in colder climates.
Benton County, Oregon (OR), Benton County falls in zone 8a to 8b, similar to the cooler end of Gila County. However, Oregon's maritime climate brings wet winters and cool summers, favoring conifers and moisture-loving trees. Gila County's dry heat and lower humidity make drought-tolerant species like Arizona cypress and palms much more suitable.

