Chamaecyparis – often called false cypress – comes in an impressive range of compact, garden‑friendly forms. Many cultivars stay within 1–3m for a good long time, which makes them realistic for typical UK gardens rather than just great estates. You can choose tidy cones, rounded domes, soft sprays or flat, fan‑shaped foliage, depending on the variety. Pop one into a mixed bed, a gravel garden, or a simple lawn island and you’ve instantly got year‑round structure without committing to a huge tree. In a modest Cambridgeshire plot, that kind of scale is genuinely practical.



Common name: False Cypress
Latin name: Chamaecyparis
Size in UK gardens: Varies by cultivar; many compact forms reach 1–3m tall and 0.8–2m wide in time, while larger selections and species trees can become much taller. Always check the label.
Best position: A sunny or lightly shaded, reasonably sheltered spot, with enough room for the chosen variety to show its natural shape without being squeezed against paths or buildings.
Soil: Moist but well‑drained, reasonably fertile soil; happiest in slightly acidic to neutral conditions and less keen on very shallow, chalky or bone‑dry ground.
Flowering time: Not grown for flowers; main interest is evergreen foliage, varied form and, on older plants, small cones that form and ripen over several seasons.
Hardiness: Generally fully hardy across much of the UK once established, provided drainage is good and roots aren’t sitting in winter water.
Care level: Easy to moderate – low‑maintenance once settled, with sensible watering in the early years, a little mulch, and only light pruning if needed.
The Simpson’s team raises the majority of our trees here at the nursery. For varieties outside our own production, we work with independent local growers we trust - all chosen for UK climate suitability.
Planting time: Container‑grown Chamaecyparis can be planted in most months when the soil isn’t frozen or waterlogged, with autumn and early spring usually easiest. This gives roots time to establish before summer heat or the depths of winter.
Watering: Water regularly in the first couple of years, particularly in dry Cambridgeshire summers and in very free‑draining soils, so the rootball and surrounding soil don’t dry out completely. Once established, many cultivars cope well with normal rainfall, needing extra water only in extended drought.
Feeding: In decent garden soil, feeding can be modest – a spring mulch of compost or well‑rotted manure around the base is usually enough. On very poor or sandy soils, a light application of balanced, slow‑release fertiliser in early spring can support healthy growth and colour.
Pruning: Chamaecyparis generally needs very little pruning. Limit yourself to removing dead, damaged or awkward branches, and if you need to reduce size, do it gradually and avoid cutting back hard into bare old wood. Choose the right cultivar rather than relying on heavy pruning.
Winter: Established plants need minimal winter attention beyond a mulch over the root area and the occasional check after strong winds. Minor browning on the windward side is usually cosmetic and replaced by fresh growth in spring.
Availability is always changing, so please check with us if you have a particular variety in mind.
A compact Lawson with creamy-white tips that give a softly frosted look, as if the plant has been touched by winter light. It’s ideal for brightening a small border or a smart container, and it’s especially effective alongside darker evergreens where those pale highlights look crisp and intentional.
A neat, silvery-toned Lawson cypress that brings a cooler, lighter finish than plain green forms. It works beautifully as a small focal point in gravel gardens and modern borders, where the silver sheen helps lift the whole palette and adds a refined, “designed” feel through every season.
A golden dwarf Hinoki that forms a dense, glowing mound—like a little evergreen lantern in the border. Perfect for rockeries, gravel beds, and pots near the house, where its warm colour gives instant cheer and its tight, fan-like foliage provides year-round structure close to eye level.
A classic dwarf Hinoki with beautifully tiered, shell-like fans that look almost carved, giving it a calm, architectural presence. It’s superb where you want evergreen structure with a Japanese-garden elegance—tucked into a gravel scheme, placed by steps, or used as a small specimen that always looks composed.
A warm, golden Hinoki with layered foliage that holds colour well, bringing a soft, sunlit note through the darker months. It’s excellent as a highlight among deep greens, or as a pot feature where you want steady winter brightness without relying on flowers, while still keeping that refined Hinoki texture.
A compact Sawara cypress with fine, dense foliage forming a tidy, rounded cushion—quietly useful and always neat. It’s ideal for the front of borders, edging paths, and anchoring gravel beds, giving the planting a finished look and a dependable evergreen backbone that doesn’t dominate.
A decorative Lawson with softly variegated foliage that adds lightness without looking flashy, making it easy to blend into mixed planting. It’s perfect in small borders or containers near patios, where the subtle patterning can be enjoyed up close, and it pairs beautifully with darker greens for gentle contrast.
A cool, blue-leaning Lawson with a crisp, modern feel—excellent for bringing calm and contrast into evergreen schemes. Use it as a vertical accent in borders, as a steady anchor in gravel planting, or repeated for rhythm, where the blue tones sharpen the palette and look especially good in winter light.
A tiny Hinoki forming a neat, textured bun of deep green fans—perfect for small spaces where you still want conifer character. It’s made for troughs, rockeries and the front of borders, adding evergreen punctuation and a calm, sculptural feel that looks deliberately placed all year round.
A petite Lawson with silvery variegation that gives a gentle sparkle, especially when the light is low in winter. It’s ideal as a small “jewel” in gravel gardens and container displays, where its fine texture and pale highlights add refinement and stop evergreen planting feeling too uniform.