Moosewood tree glows in the winter landscape
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Woody ornamentals pack my yard like canned sardines. We just can鈥檛 help it, my husband and I. There鈥檚 always one more plant to try 鈥 a speck of open ground where we can see how this or that grows.
The reasons we pick our plants are many. Some are for fruit or flowers, some for leaves, and some for unusual bark or habit.
Which brings me to my topic. I was moseying about the garden when I came upon our little patch of striped-bark maples. Acer pensylvanicum 鈥楨rythrocladum鈥, a naturally occurring variety of , or coral-striped maple, made me catch my breath.
The youngest shoots are bright red in winter. They age to pinkish orange-red with faint white stripes. We鈥檝e had our little coral-striped maple about six years. It grows near a stand of white pine by the back wall, where it鈥檚 easy to overlook it for much of the year.
In winter, however, you can鈥檛 ignore it because it glows.
also stands out in fall, when the big, three-lobed, four- to six-inch turn a rich, butter yellow. The trunk has a yellow-orange tint, and summer branches are muted green, much like the species.
My coral-stripe maple is about 7 feet tall and 3 to 4 feet wide, but mature specimens can grow twice as high. Some grow as multistem trees or shrubs with upright branches.
An understory tree, it grows best in part shade, developing an open and irregular habit. Plants in heavier shade get gangly and need pruning when used as garden specimens. Mine鈥檚 rangy, but it has a cool variegated sucker at the base.
Native to the northeastern US and southeastern Canada, it鈥檚 hardy in USDA . If you live where summers are cool and soil is slightly acidic, give it a try. Its irregular form fits right into woodland or naturalistic settings. The winter bark shows well against a dark evergreen background and looks gloriously gaudy in snow.
Penelope O鈥橲ullivan is one of nine garden writers who blog regularly at Diggin' It. She is the author of "The Homeowner's Complete Tree & Shrub Handbook" and 11 more books on trees, shrubs, hedges, flowers, herbs, and garden design. She is a guest speaker on many gardening topics, has written and scouted for numerous magazines, and owns a garden design business in New Hampshire.
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