Garden Edit - Silver Maple Removal - April 2024
A mature gardener can edit their garden. I'm not there yet, but learning everyday. And, I've made an edit to the garden that put me out of my comfort zone a little bit: removing a tree. The tree in question was one that I didn't plant - it was a volunteer. A Silver Maple. I figured out what it was last Fall and posted about Silver Maples - and the paradox of Silver Maples.
I let this grow as a volunteer and then last year it LEPT up. Big time growth. That put my antenna up a little bit. Things are NOT supposed to grow that fast.
Then, this past week, I noticed this foliage:
Lovely, right? Lace-like. Purples and greens. Almost Japanese-maple-ish.
So, I went online (again) and thought about the Silver Maple. That foliage was striking. But, I needed to re-think things. A quick look around the Web and you'll discover that not only are Silver Maples fast-growing, they also have three primary issues: weak limbs (come down in a storm), litter (helicopters everywhere) and....they have surface roots.
Maples with surface roots - I've been there before. The Norway Maple up front suffocated EVERYTHING in sight. That did it for me: if this Silver Maple stays, the garden bed at the base of the trunk will disappear.
The days of wasting time, energy, money and garden space on things that I don't love needs to end. That means - doing something I don't want to do: kill this tree.
The research keeps pushing me in that direction. I found this quote from a Redditor that confirmed my decision:"No good nurseryman ever grows silver maple or weeping willow."
Welp, I went out there and got busy.
To convince myself to dig up the rootball, I first decided to chop it off half-way up the trunk. No going back now:
We (now) have 69 of 98 trees that we've planted. 70.45% success rate over seven years.
98 trees planted/8 growing seasons = 12.25 trees on average planted each season
69 trees alive/8 growing seasons = 8.62 trees on average survive each season.
1. Flowering Pear in backyard on north side.
2.
4 and 5: 2 Lindens that I espalier'd and placed by the south fence line near our kitchen windows.
6. A Dawn Redwood from Earth Day 2017
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.
79 and 80. Dwarf "witches broom" Ginkgo trees - Spring Grove - planted on either side of our back stoop.
81. A (very small) Acer palmatum Emperor 1 Japanese Maple planted in the kitchen window bed by the row of Astilbes.
82. A low-grafted Waterfall Japanese Maple tree - Acer palmatum dissectum 'Waterfall'.
83. A small, but upright red lace-leaf Japanese Maple - Unknown variety planted amongst the hostas on the north side understory bed.
84. The first of three trees from Mr. Maple - a one-gallon Acer palmatum 'Firefly' that is planted in the Understory garden in back.
85. The second of three trees from Mr. Maple - another one-gallon Japanese Maple: Acer palmatum 'First Ghost' back by the firepit.
86. The third tree from Mr. Maple - an upright green dissectum Japanese maple that I planted near the failing (in decline) Japanese Cherry Tree.
87.
88. A high-grafted (5#) Acer palmatum Inaba Shadire planted by the wine barrel water spitter in the backyard.
89. This two-year-old Northern Catalpa volunteer that is on the corner of our patio.
90 and 91: A pair of Kousa Dogwood Trees planted to espalier against garage sidewall.92. A dwarf conifer tree: Baby Blue Spruce - planted IB2DWs near the sidewalk.
93. A Weeping Norway Spruce 'Pendula' planted IB2DWs - west of the Bald Cypress.
94. A second Weeping Norway Spruce - in my new "Conifer Garden". IB2DWs extended.
95. A narrow, upright conifer tree - Montrose Charm White Spruce in the 'Conifer Garden' IB2DWs.
96. The 2nd Baby Blue Spruce tree planted IB2DWs in the new 'Conifer Garden' closer to the Bald Cypress.
97. A 3rd Baby Blue Spruce tree planted in back by the Lindens - viewable from the Kitchen.
98. I'm calling it a tree (not a shrub) - a Royal Purple Smoke Tree planted IB2Dws.
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