Like
me, do you love the bold
oranges, yellows and scarlets of
autumn
leaves, and hearing them crunch
as you walk through them?
Childhood fun involves kicking
fallen leaves, and raking them
in to piles and then jumping
into the brown hillocks.
Most sections of the country experience the dramatic blazing of autumn leaves. The West has the sun yellow of aspens, the upper Mississippi River in Minneapolis and Wisconsin has fall color tours, and New England’s leaf peeper tours are famous. You can create this drama in your yard by planting the spectacular deciduous trees.
September and October are ideal times to plant trees, since they get a head start on becoming established, versus waiting till spring to plant them, and if you are buying at a local nursery you can sometimes see the trees with fall foliage attached, so you can see what color that tree is likely to produce for you.
MaplesDogwoods
Dogwoods offer everything: spring
flowers, colorful autumn leaves,
and fruit that wild birds love.
Chinese dogwoods (Cornus kousa)
are popular for their resistance
to anthracnose. The rare Chinese
dogwood Satomi (Cornus kousa
Satomi), AKA Rosabella, is
available from Wayside Gardens,
800 213-0379, displays rosy
blooms, scarlet fruit and sunset
red leaves in fall, is 12-15
feet, and grows in zones 5-8.
Samaritan has white flowers, is
very hardy, and has green leaves
edged with white that turn pink,
red and burgundy in autumn.
Sumac
Staghorn
Sumac and Smooth Sumac produce
splashy fall color along many of
America’s country roads. These
are not the poisonous sumac!
Sumacs will spread by suckers,
so cut those back. Most areas of
the U.S. and southern Canada
have native sumac varieties,
with sumac being common in the
north east and growing as far
south as Georgia.
Staghorn Sumac (Rhus typhina) is named for its young branches, which are fuzzy like a stag’s new antlers. These trees usually grow 9 to 15 feet in yards. The leaves are handsome with a fern frond appearance, and they turn to orange, red or maroon for a short lived display in the fall. Sumac are tough and can be planted where nothing else will grow; they are tolerant of poor soil but not of wet soil.
Smooth Sumac (Rhus glabra) is either a tall shrub or a small tree, averaging 10 feet in height, and up to 20 feet. For bright red in fall this is a good choice. Both sumacs grow in zones 4-8.
Quaking
Aspen
If your
timing is right, and you have
driven through the Colorado
Rocky Mountains in mid September
to mid October, you have
thrilled to see mile after mile
of sun gold aspens, contrasted
with the dark green of the pine
trees growing near. When I
experienced this, I had to keep
stopping to look and take ever
more photos.
Sweet
Gum
Plant these
trees in early fall, sit back
and enjoy the color foliage
spectacle next fall.
The Sweet Gum is a longed for answer for gardeners in temperate climates, like coastal California where I live. American Sweet Gum (Liquidambar styraciflua) is beloved for spectacular fall foliage ranging from yellow and pink to orange, red, purple and crimson. It is helpful to see your tree in the local nursery in the fall, with a few leaves attached to it, which gives you a hint of which colors the tree will provide as it matures. The cultivar Palo Alto is noted for its orange foliage and is very popular in California, as is Burgundy with its deep red purple autumn leaves. Sweet Gums drop spiny golf ball size fruits, when they reach about 15 years, so consider this when choosing where to plant them. Zones 4 or 5 to 9.
Plant these trees in early fall, sit back and enjoy the color foliage spectacle next fall.
Tree photo courtesy of Wikipedia.com. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify the tree photos on this page under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.
Copyright © by Terra Hangen Share