Acer palmatum 'Harvest Orange'

Discussion in 'Acer palmatum cultivars (photos)' started by winterhaven, Oct 30, 2008.

  1. winterhaven

    winterhaven Active Member Maple Society 10 Years

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    Fall 2008
     

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    Last edited: Nov 7, 2008
  2. Kaitain4

    Kaitain4 Well-Known Member Maple Society 10 Years

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    Re: Acer palmatum Harvest Orange

    hmmm.. Never heard of this one before! Winter, I may have to have you go on a secret mission and snip me some scion wood! LOL!! Gorgeous tree!
     
  3. winterhaven

    winterhaven Active Member Maple Society 10 Years

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    Re: Acer palmatum Harvest Orange

    LOL. I just checked with the nursery and they don't ship. Their current inventory does not include any small ones, their least expensive is $125 and is about 4' tall. If you become obsessed (just anticipating here) and decide you can't live without it, let me know and I'll help you get it shipped.

    Of course, it is on my short list, but not the short-short list until I learn more about it. If it makes it to my short-short list AND I buy it, I would probably be able to ship you a snippet as I tend to open up my trees. But you'd have to teach me how to prepare what I cut.

    I must say, I really like the idea of planting an Osakazuki, an Ichigyoji, and a Harvest orange in a triangular pattern near my ponds where the leaves could eventually intertwine at the edges... Hmmm.

    Darn it, stop waiving that leaf at me! LOL
     
  4. winterhaven

    winterhaven Active Member Maple Society 10 Years

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    I succumbed to temptation last fall and purchased a Harvest Orange and put it in the ground mid/late fall. This spring Harvest Orange has been slowly opening up for me. It's in a sheltered, fairly shady location and a portion of the tree is in leaf. This is what is looks like this spring.
     

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  5. winterhaven

    winterhaven Active Member Maple Society 10 Years

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    To follow up, this tree has been nice but (IMHO) not extraordinary. First it's green, then it's green, and then it's green. During fall it's orange, which is nice, but it wasn't a clear orange. Further there are a number of nice orange fall cultivars out there.
     
  6. Scion Swapper

    Scion Swapper Active Member

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    Winterhaven,
    Thanks for the update. I don't know this cultivar, but I am always appreciative when someone gives an honest opinion when a plant doesn't meet their expectations. With now thousands of cultivars, and many more being introduced every year, I feel that we as maple enthusiasts should be honest in our assessments of newly appearing cultivars. Years ago I received scions from a good friend of a cultivar called Acer palmatum 'Oranges and Lemons' (not my friends plant, but in their collection). I grafted a couple, observed and let the resulting grafts grow for a number of years. They had the leaf shape and growth habit of Acer palmatum, during the summer the leaves darkened a bit, and in the fall they had some subdued yellowish orange color, typical of the species. I never grafted another one and I no longer have that plant. Maybe I'm just jaded at this point, but I think more time/observation/comparison of new seedlings needs to be done before any consideration is made to introduce a plant as a cultivar. I know many growers that share this feeling.

    Anyway, I will still likely try and acquire a 'Harvest Orange' for evaluation at some point. But I will be watching with a critical eye.

    Brian
     
  7. katsura

    katsura Active Member 10 Years

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    Brian,
    I SECOND with enthusiasm your remark that "...more time/observation/comparison of new seedlings needs to be done
    before any consideration is made to introduce a plant as a cultivar."
    RIGHT ON!
    Mike
     
  8. mr.shep

    mr.shep Well-Known Member 10 Years

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    Re: O.T. seedlings

    Several of the Heptalobums will do this same
    kind of year round greening and diminished
    lobe count when grafted onto prevalent five
    lobed green palmatum seedlings. Some
    people in the past felt that the orange cast
    Spring colored plants were better suited
    being grafted onto red, predominately
    seven lobed, rootstocks instead.

    In today's diluted array of cultivars and
    their modified forms, it is quite refreshing
    to read that others are starting to learn
    why the purists waited so long in time
    before they ever considered a seedling
    as a "Maple to be named later". A few
    requirements were needed to sustain
    the plant over time in order for most
    any of the olden day purists to feel
    that their proposed new Maple was
    indeed different enough to warrant
    being named. From a nurseryman's
    standpoint several promising seedlings
    never did pass the proverbial litmus test
    of being perpetuated with the intent to
    introduce into the nursery trade as a
    viable nursery standard plant. Which
    at one time was the ultimate goal of
    the nurseryman/collector and that
    was to introduce a new plant that
    was capable of being grown in a
    wide array of locations, much more
    so than those which were kept and
    perpetuated solely as a collection
    plant due to suspected and known
    growing limitations in other Maple
    growing areas.

    Jim
     

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