By
Norman Winter Brookhaven,
Miss. is known far and wide as home to great camellias and
to highly respected camellia gardeners, but on a recent
trip, it was not the camellias that caught my attention but
Japanese Maples. Some of
the most beautiful and healthy maples I have ever seen were
in those gardens. I am a believer in Japanese maples and
have grown some myself, but there is much mystery to this
group of plants. These small trees are brilliant in the
spring with new red color followed by exotic foliage
throughout the summer and many with a fall blaze of crimson,
orange and yellow. While
the Japanese maple can be used as a bonsai, small tub
planting, awesome accent or artistically grouped, there are
hundreds (if not thousands) of selections which 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 in two groups: non-dissected leafed
and dissected-type leaves. Japanese
maples can be grouped by three types: uprights, laceleafs
and bush-dwarf types. Among the uprights are the
linearilobums with long, narrow lobes on each leaf. The
dissectums are laceleafs with pinnately dissected leaves.
The growth habit of the laceleaf types 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, 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
of dappled light. Even though I have seen gorgeous specimen
in Poplarville's full sun, I still recommend some
shade. Supplemental
water during the summer goes a long way to preventing the
scorching of the leaves. They take 10 years to reach 15
feet. Oldest plantings of Japanese maples in the United
States find some 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 also exceptional in rock gardens and worked 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. After
going to Brookhaven, I just wonder if Mississippi might have
quite a collection, but in different gardeners' yards? Help
me start a list. If you have a Japanese maple that you are
positive of the identification, drop me a note of the name
of the Japanese maple as well as your name and address. If
you don't have a Japanese maple, get one or two. Fall is a
great time to plant. Released:
Oct. 29, 1998 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
Southern
Gardening
Mississippi
Gardeners Love Japanese Maples
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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