Description
This is the tree that stops traffic in spring—a three-week metamorphosis from leaf to edible treasure.
Toona sinensis ‘Flamingo’ is a rare cultivar bred in Australia before 1930, selected specifically for what gardeners across the world now crave: leaves so brilliantly, impossibly pink that from across the garden they look like the tree is flowering. The pinnate foliage unfolds in hot salmon, apricot, and near-white tones, then gradually softens to creamy yellow and finally green by summer’s end. Fall delivers golden-yellow before the tree rests. Add peeling bark that strips in long, decorative ribbons and you have a tree that’s visually arresting every season—but transcendent for those precious weeks in spring.
But here’s what makes ‘Flamingo’ truly special: those gorgeous pink leaves aren’t just ornamental—they’re dinner. In China and across Asia, Toona sinensis has been cultivated for over 2,000 years specifically for its edible shoots and young leaves. The tender growth tastes of something between sweet onion and garlic, with a floral undertone, making it a delicacy in stir-fries, salads, soups, and as a gourmet seasoning. You harvest in spring when the leaves are most tender and most vibrantly colored—the same moment they’re at peak visual beauty. It’s a dual-purpose harvest: gorgeous to look at, exquisite to eat. The leaves are also rich in vitamins A, B, and C, and traditional medicine treasures them for anti-inflammatory properties. Imagine cutting stems of your own pink toon for both the dinner table and a vase.
Growing ‘Flamingo’ is forgiving. It loves full sun—essential for the most intense pink color—and thrives in well-drained soil, adapting easily to clay, loam, and sandy soils alike. It’s heat and humidity tolerant, hardy in USDA zones 6–9, and grows at a moderate pace, reaching 15–25 meters at maturity depending on conditions. Water regularly but don’t overwater; the tree prefers moist, not waterlogged, soil. In summer, delicate white flowers emerge in dangling panicles, fragrant and loved by pollinators. The tree naturally suckers and forms a multi-stemmed colony, which you can either allow to develop into a dramatic coppice or manage by regular mowing of root suckers. Either way, it’s flexible, adaptable, and genuinely easy to establish from seed.
Grow Toona sinensis ‘Flamingo’ and you’re not just planting a tree—you’re cultivating a living calendar that marks spring’s arrival with unbridled pink extravagance, then feeds your family with ancestral flavor for millennia to come. Start from seed and watch the magic unfold.














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