Japanese
maples showing
fall color
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
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Fall
is a great time to plant Japanese maple
trees. Bloodgood, like the one pictured
here, is a popular selection and also a
Mississippi Medallion award
winner.
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This past
weekend I was giving a program in Tuscaloosa and noticed the
Japanese maples were starting to show their first hints of
fall color. The trees were really healthy and exquisite in
form.
Another
great town for Japanese maples is Brookhaven, which may be
the garden spot of our state. They not only have many
lace-leaf or dissected types, but also some of the oldest
non-dissected Japanese maples.
I am a
believer in Japanese maples and have grown some myself, but
there is much mystery associated with this group of plants.
These small trees are brilliant in the spring, with new red
color, followed by exotic foliage throughout the summer, and
often with a fall blaze of crimson, orange and
yellow.
The
Japanese maple can be used as a bonsai, a small tub planting
or an awesome accent, or several can be grouped
artistically. But there are hundreds -- if not thousands --
of selections that most of us know little about.
The
Japanese maple is known botanically as Acer palmatum. Our
native red maple is Acer rubrum. Nurserymen usually think of
the Japanese maple as having two leaf types: non-dissected
and dissected.
Japanese
maples can be grouped by three types: uprights, lace-leafs
and bush-dwarf types. Among the uprights are the
linearilobums, which have long, narrow lobes on each leaf.
The lace-leafs are dissectums with pinnately dissected
leaves. The growth habit of the lace-leaf type is usually
cascading or weeping. The bush-dwarf group includes maples
that are slower-growing and bushy.
Popular
cultivars in the non-dissected group are Bloodgood, a
Mississippi Medallion award winner, Oshu beni and Senaki.
Some of those in the dissected group are Crimson Queen, Ever
Red and Tamukeyama.
Mississippi
is fortunate to be able to grow the Japanese maple. They
prefer well-drained, moist, slightly acidic soils. I like
them best with morning sun and afternoon shade, or in areas
with dappled light. Even though I have seen gorgeous
specimens in Poplarville's full sun, I still recommend some
shade.
Supplemental
water during the summer helps prevent leaf scorching. They
take 10 years to reach 15 feet. Some of the oldest plantings
of Japanese maples in the United States are in the 50-foot
range.
Those
in the dissectum group have more of a layered, mushroom
shape in the garden, and their heights are usually much
shorter.
Newly
leafed-out Japanese maples are gorgeous in early spring
combined with azaleas, dogwoods and Louisiana phlox. They
are exceptional in rock gardens and in combination plantings
with full-size and dwarf conifers like the Chamaecyparis
Crippsii.
The
slow growth rate, coupled with the many groups, sub-species
and cultivars, intimidate many, making it hard to start an
evaluation program. The Missouri Botanical Garden in St.
Louis has one of the best collections and is well worth the
trip.
If you
don't have a Japanese maple, get one or two. Fall is a great
time to plant them. Also, don't forget Autumn Blaze, a red
maple that was a Mississippi Medallion award winner a couple
of years ago.
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Released:
November 18, 2004
Contact: Norman
Winter,
(601) 857-2284
Editor's
Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns
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