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Plant of the Week
Octber 6, 2007
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Shantung Plant-of-the-Week |
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by
David Rodriguez
The Shantung maple (Acer truncatum) is a fabulous midsize ornamental
tree which reaches 25' in height with a 20' wide spread. This is an ideal tree
for small yards which can also tolerate alkaline soils, drought, and windy situations.
The Shantung maple ranks high on the list for autumn colored trees with leaves
that turn a gorgeous golden yellow flecked with red before they launch into
orange and finally turn into a gorgeous blazing red. The Shantung maple differentiates
from other maples that should not be planted here, especially the troublesome
Drummond Red maple and Silver maple in that the canopy is denser and the leaves
are more delicate, which is reminiscent of a Japanese maple but with much greater
toughness (tolerates full sun). The Shantung maple was designated a Texas superstar
tree by Texas A&M University in 2001, http://texassuperstar.com.
General Planting Guidelines for Trees and Shrubs:
In the nursery, small trees (6-8 feet height) may be your best investment, since
they recover more quickly from transplant shock than larger specimens. Container-grown
stock is generally the quickest to re-establish and readily available then balled-and-burlapped
and bare-rooted trees.
When planting, the first step is to dig a hole of sufficient size. As far as
depth is concerned, plant the tree or shrub about the same depth it was growing
in the nursery. On a bare-root plant, the trunk or main stem is often discolored
at the original soil line. This may be several inches above the upper-most roots.
Plant a balled-and-burlapped plant so the top of the soil ball is at the soil
surface or several inches above the soil surface--error on the side of planting
too shallow rather than planting too deep. Trees will die because of wood rotting
caused by soil being piled on the trunk.
When setting out balled-and-burlapped plants, the hole should be about 1½
times the diameter of the ball. The depth should be the same as the depth of
the ball or several inches shallower than the depth of the ball. For container
grown plants, the hole size should be just large enough to allow placement of
the root system in the planting hole.
After setting the tree or shrub in the hole, always use the same soil which
was dug out of the hole as backfill or with no more then 20% enriched organic
compost mixed with that native soil. Adapted trees and shrubs do not need much
soil amendments to help them become established. Water the plant thoroughly
after planting with a slow flow into the planting hole to settle the soil fill
around the root system and remove all air pockets.
Fertilizer should not be used on new plants. But, if it makes you feel good,
apply a liquid root stimulator. Otherwise, fertilizer should only be used after
the plant has become well established in the new location which often takes
6 - 8 months.
Water your shade trees slowly and thoroughly during dry spells. Fertilize in
late February with a complete and slow-release fertilizer such as 19-5-9. Use
three pounds of this fertilizer per inch of trunk diameter, measured 12 inches
off the ground.
Remember, Learn and Have Fun!
David Rodriguez is County Extension Agent-Horticulture, Bexar County. For more
information, call the Master Gardener 'Hotline' at (210) 467-6575 or visit our
County Extension website at http://bexar-tx.tamu.edu,
click under Horticulture and Gardening.