Inaba shidare Japanese Maple Planted - July 2023
At the Morton Arboretum Arbor Day Plant Sale this year, I came across this sign (photo below) describing a Japanese Maple variety that was new (to me): Inaba shidare. It was listed as an Acer palmatum and the photo had red laceleaf foliage. The sign describes it as "The best of the weeping red laceleaf maples for its leaf color retention in Summer, its scorch resistance, vigor and hardiness. The lace-like foliage emerges deep purple in Spring, matures to purple-red by Summer and finally turns bright red in Fall."
I mean...what's not to love about that, right?
I had previously purchased a Japanese Maple from the Morton Sale - an Emperor 1 in 2021 - and have been REALLY happy with it in our garden. So, when I saw this sign for the Inaba shidare, I wanted one.
The only problem?
They were gone. Sold out. Or...at least...sold out during *my* visit.
Felt a little bit like a 'one that got away' sort-of-deal.
So, imagine my delight when I was picking up some lumber for my sideyard floating backyard boardwalk at Menards when I wandered through their garden center and noticed a weeping Japanese Maple. Tamukeyama, I figured.
I pulled on the tag and saw this:
Obviously...I bought it. It is a high-grafted Japanese Maple. I found this page from Davidsons Japanese Maples (a JM nursery here in Illinois that has...unfortunately...closed) that talks grafts - and how they prefer lower-grafted trees. This one is a VERY Tall graft - and gives the tree an appearance of being much more mature than it really is, thanks to the 3'-tall stem it is growing. Below is a photo that shows the Acer palmatum Inaba shidare on a tall graft.
This is now the third Japanese Maple in this little slice of our garden - all three planted this year. The annotated photo below shows the three - the Inaba shadire in the front, the upright Seiryu in the orange circle and the Waterfall in the teal oval.
2023 marks my seventh tree-planting season.
This is now the ninth tree planted of the year and 86 overall. And the seventh (living) Japanese Maple overall - two Emperor 1's, a Waterfall, an unknown laceleaf upright, a small Firefly, a First Ghost and now this Weeping Acer palmatum Inaba Shadire. I had a small Tamukeyama that died back completely. 2023 certainly is shaping up to be the year of the Japanese Maple.
We (now) have 60 of 86 trees that we've planted.
86 trees planted/7 growing seasons = 12.28 trees on average planted each season
60 trees alive/7 growing seasons = 8.52 trees on average survive each season.
8 Japanese Maples planted. 7 Japanese Maples still alive.
1. Flowering Pear in backyard on north side.
3. Japanese flowering cherry
4 and 5: 2 Lindens that I espalier'd and placed by the south fence line near our kitchen windows.
7. Nat's Saucer Magnolia in our front yard
2018 (17 planted. 6 Dead):
14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21. These Frans Fontaine Hornbeams.
22. A replacement Chanticleer Pear tree (3" caliper) out front by our garage
25. Our replanted/replacement Dawn Redwood. Same spot as the first.
26. This teeny-tiny Bald Cypress that I planted in the front yard, in between our driveway and our neighbor to the north.
33. My new Weeping White Spruce that will only grow about 4' wide placed near the fence line alongside the espalier'd Lindens.
35. T
46. A small Northern Red Oak tree - our first Oak tree planted.
47. A 'decapitated' Lavender Twist Weeping Redbud that I planted on a whim.
49. A tall(ish) London Plane tree that suffered some transplant and frost shock, but seemed to recover.
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