1/23/2024 0 Comments Tall red japanese mapleWith the move to smaller gardens and tiny town gardens there is often a need for a tree, but most shade trees grow too large for small spaces and quickly become problems that mean they have to be removed, often at considerable expense. Japanese Maples in the Garden and Landscape In very warm areas there may not be sufficient winter cold to stimulate the buds to re-grow and this does make it impossible to grow these trees in tropical and sub-tropical places. Growing trees in shadier locations and making sure they have sufficient water will normally prevent this problem in summer. When this occurs trees will sprout normally the following spring. In hot regions the main danger is heat and sun-scorch, which can cause the leaves to shrivel in summer. In areas that are too cold the branches may suffer from damage in winter and die, although often the main stems will re-sprout. Some varieties will thrive in zone 4 as well. In gardens Japanese Maples are hardy form zone 5 to zone 8, with some being hardy into zone 9. So making a different choice from the main-stream will always bring something special and unique into your garden. However many of the other forms are very worthwhile garden plants, including forms with colored winter twigs, unusual leaf shapes and ones grown for particularly spectacular or unusual fall coloring. Of the many forms introduced and bred, the most popular are those with red summer leaves those with finely divided leaves and those that are pendulous and cascading. The Japanese name momiji means the hand of a baby. The Swiss botanist and doctor Carl Peter Thunberg named the tree Acer palmatum, because the leaf looked like a hand. In the 19 th century travelers and botanists began to bring trees back from Japan and they quickly became very popular with gardeners in Europe and America. Although some purists only grow original Japanese varieties, many of the best and most popular were developed in the West and have been introduced back into Japan. Many forms were developed in Japan and these of course have Japanese names, while others were bred in Europe or America and usually have English-sounding names. Japanese gardeners began to collect these forms, and produce more from seedlings, so that today at least a thousand different forms are known. Unlike many plants, where each individual is very much the same as another, these trees are naturally very variable, with different leaf-forms, colors and tree shapes. More than an excuse for a picnic, momiji-gari is considered a lofty spiritual experience. Japanese maple produce small flowers in spring and the seeds are the small ‘keys’ typical of all maples, which twirl down to the ground in fall.įor many centuries the Japanese people have travelled to the countryside to see the fall color, like east-coast Americans admiring the sugar maple. However the leaves are much smaller than on typical maple trees and since many garden forms have deeply divided leaves they may not be immediately recognized as maple trees. Being a maple tree it has the typical lobed leaf, with veins spreading out like the fingers of a hand and ending in five to nine lobes, with one lobe in the centre of the leaf. This tree grows in the shade of larger forest trees, which is why it is more shade-tolerant than most other deciduous trees. The bark is smooth and gray on older limbs, but green, red or sometimes pink on younger shoots. As a wild tree it grows 20-35 feet tall, occasionally more, and usually has several trunks, rather than a single central trunk. Japanese maples grow wild across the hills of Japan, Korea and into Mongolia and Russia too.
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