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Jo Ann 20-06-2007 09:15 PM

Help ID'ing plant/tree
 
A garden I drive past regularly has this great looking plant in it. I
can't seem to drive by when there is anyone out in the yard and I'm
too shy to actually knock on their door to ask what it is, so thought
maybe you folks could help.

It looks like a short -- REALLY short -- maple tree of some kind.
It's about 2-3 feet tall. It has a single trunk (or a very trunk-like
stem) that is a couple inches in diameter and an umbrella-shaped
canopy of dark reddish/burgundy, maple-like leaves (deeply cut and
serrated). They must not think it's going to get very big, as it's an
anchor point in quite a small garden bed. It makes me think of a
Japanese maple, except it's so small and the shape is so tidy (I
realize that could be pruning, of course).

Sound familiar to anyone? Thanks in advance for suggestions!

Jo Ann


Sheldon[_1_] 20-06-2007 10:04 PM

Help ID'ing plant/tree
 
On Jun 20, 4:15?pm, Jo Ann wrote:
A garden I drive past regularly has this great looking plant in it. I
can't seem to drive by when there is anyone out in the yard and I'm
too shy to actually knock on their door to ask what it is,


You could have snapped a picture.

It looks like a short -- REALLY short -- maple tree of some kind.
It's about 2-3 feet tall. It has a single trunk (or a very trunk-like
stem) that is a couple inches in diameter and an umbrella-shaped
canopy of dark reddish/burgundy, maple-like leaves (deeply cut and
serrated). They must not think it's going to get very big, as it's an
anchor point in quite a small garden bed. It makes me think of a
Japanese maple, except it's so small and the shape is so tidy (I
realize that could be pruning, of course).

Sound familiar to anyone?


I'll bet it's Japanese red maple... there are many cultivars, some
don't get very large and most don't grow very fast... they are also
rather simple to keep small by pruning/training... Japanee red maple
makes for fine bonsai specimens.


Amos Nomore 20-06-2007 10:08 PM

Help ID'ing plant/tree
 
In article . com,
Jo Ann wrote:

A garden I drive past regularly has this great looking plant in it. I
can't seem to drive by when there is anyone out in the yard and I'm
too shy to actually knock on their door to ask what it is, so thought
maybe you folks could help.

It looks like a short -- REALLY short -- maple tree of some kind.
It's about 2-3 feet tall. It has a single trunk (or a very trunk-like
stem) that is a couple inches in diameter and an umbrella-shaped
canopy of dark reddish/burgundy, maple-like leaves (deeply cut and
serrated). They must not think it's going to get very big, as it's an
anchor point in quite a small garden bed. It makes me think of a
Japanese maple, except it's so small and the shape is so tidy (I
realize that could be pruning, of course).

Sound familiar to anyone? Thanks in advance for suggestions!

The dwarf Japanese Maple 'Shaina' is pretty small.

http://davesgarden.com/pf/go/75420/index.html

Jo Ann 21-06-2007 02:17 PM

Help ID'ing plant/tree
 
On Jun 20, 4:08 pm, Amos Nomore wrote:
In article . com,
Jo Ann wrote:





A garden I drive past regularly has this great looking plant in it. I
can't seem to drive by when there is anyone out in the yard and I'm
too shy to actually knock on their door to ask what it is, so thought
maybe you folks could help.


It looks like a short -- REALLY short -- maple tree of some kind.
It's about 2-3 feet tall. It has a single trunk (or a very trunk-like
stem) that is a couple inches in diameter and an umbrella-shaped
canopy of dark reddish/burgundy, maple-like leaves (deeply cut and
serrated). They must not think it's going to get very big, as it's an
anchor point in quite a small garden bed. It makes me think of a
Japanese maple, except it's so small and the shape is so tidy (I
realize that could be pruning, of course).


Sound familiar to anyone? Thanks in advance for suggestions!


The dwarf Japanese Maple 'Shaina' is pretty small.

http://davesgarden.com/pf/go/75420/index.html- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


As I look at these pictures, I'm convinced it is some kind of dwarf
Japanese red maple, and "Shaina" is a good possibility. I also think,
as Sheldon suggests, it's been bonsai'd (excuse the backformed verb)
to look exactly as it does. Thanks for the help! Now I need to
figure out where I can put one....

Jo Ann


symplastless 24-06-2007 10:06 PM

Help ID'ing plant/tree
 
With ref. to the topic of pruning.
http://www.treedictionary.com/DICT20...ing/index.html

Looks just like a lace leaf japanese maple I transplanted.

Sincerely,
John A. Keslick, Jr.
Arborist
http://home.ccil.org/~treeman
and www.treedictionary.com
Beware of so-called tree experts who do not understand tree biology.
Storms, fires, floods, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions keep reminding us
that we are not the boss.

"Sheldon" wrote in message
oups.com...
On Jun 20, 4:15?pm, Jo Ann wrote:
A garden I drive past regularly has this great looking plant in it. I
can't seem to drive by when there is anyone out in the yard and I'm
too shy to actually knock on their door to ask what it is,


You could have snapped a picture.

It looks like a short -- REALLY short -- maple tree of some kind.
It's about 2-3 feet tall. It has a single trunk (or a very trunk-like
stem) that is a couple inches in diameter and an umbrella-shaped
canopy of dark reddish/burgundy, maple-like leaves (deeply cut and
serrated). They must not think it's going to get very big, as it's an
anchor point in quite a small garden bed. It makes me think of a
Japanese maple, except it's so small and the shape is so tidy (I
realize that could be pruning, of course).

Sound familiar to anyone?


I'll bet it's Japanese red maple... there are many cultivars, some
don't get very large and most don't grow very fast... they are also
rather simple to keep small by pruning/training... Japanee red maple
makes for fine bonsai specimens.




Sheldon[_1_] 24-06-2007 11:20 PM

Help ID'ing plant/tree
 
"symplastless" wrote:

Looks just like a lace leaf japanese maple I transplanted.


Looks just like... Jo Ann posted no picture I could see.



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