The Japanese maple collection featured in the Woodland Garden is one of
the Arboretum's oldest. More than 70 cultivars are displayed throughout
the Woodland Garden and there are 90 cultivars in all which is the largest
public collection of Japanese maples in the United States. In 1940 a
local Japanese nursery donated 80 different cultivars to the Arboretum and
a second large donation came from an Indiana nursery in 1966.
Japanese maples are known for fall color and unique form, as they range
from dwarf shrubs to trees of 40 feet with a weeping appearance. They
also have a highly variable leaf morphology, from nearly rounded to deeply
dissected leaves, which can be red, green or variegated.
The dissectum or laceleaf varieties are frequently planted in the home
garden. WPA has several old specimens of laceleaf maples that have been
pruned and trained into wonderful shapes with plenty of twisting
character. Green laceleaf varieties turn a golden yellow in the fall and
ones that are red during the summer, display an intensification of their
normal color in autumn.
Here is the Complete List of Japanese
Maples
The following is a sampling of just a few of the many beautiful
Japanese maples at the Washington Park Arboretum.
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| Acer palmatum 'Beni Schichihenge' | A. palmatum 'Ukigumo' |
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| A. japonicum 'Aconitifolium' --Fall color | A. palmatum 'Seiryu' --fall color |
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| A Laceleaf Variety | A. palmatum 'Matsukaze' |
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| A. palmatum 'Yezo-nishiki' | A. palmatum 'Shikageori Nishiki' |