Maple barks

Discussion in 'Maples' started by AlainK, Mar 18, 2025.

  1. AlainK

    AlainK Renowned Contributor Forums Moderator Maple Society 10 Years

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    The last two pictures are a seedling from Emery - tx -E- ;-)

    acerp-bihoo_250317a.jpg acerp_sangok02_250318a.jpg acerp-rainbow01_250317a.jpg acerc001_250317a.jpg acerc001_250317b.jpg acer-gris01_250317b.jpg acer-triflorum_250317a.jpg acer-davidii-em_250318a.jpg acer-davidii-em_250318b.jpg
     
  2. emery

    emery Renowned Contributor Maple Society 10 Years

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    I love that campestre! Glad to see the davidii is still extant, I had to pull out a couple that died in the wet.

    Was just looking at Bi-hō (both the old spelling from Nakajima, and the new, compliant name: 美峰 means "Beautiful Summit" -- hoo and hou are just meaningless rōmaji variations) a couple of days ago. I should really plant it, in a 35l it wants nothing so much as ground. But I noticed that the bark was discolored with a blackish tinge, as we see here on many smooth barks, apples, etc. It scrubs off easily, though I haven't spent a lot of time polishing trees, it has made me peel some Betula utilis. I wonder what it is, an airborn fungus, or some sort of dirt? There's virtually no industry downwind, either south or west, where the stuff builds up. And we have tons of lichens, so the air seems clean enough.

    As it happens, I assembled some Snakebark pictures for TMSBI's instagram last week, here are a few. (Celebrating the installation of fiber, my bandwidth has increased by 3000X!)

    As Alain's post shows, though, there's tons of great interest in maple bark beyond the usual Snakebarks. -E

    AconspicuumSilverCardinal-2.jpg AconspicuumSilverVein-1.jpg AconspicuumSilverVein-2.jpg Acrataegifolium-1.jpg AdavidiiMondavi-1.jpg Akawakamii-1.jpg Alaxiflorum-1.jpg Amorifulium-1.jpg ApectinatumSirene-1.jpg ArubescensYakushimanishiki-1.jpg ArubescensYakushimanishiki-2.jpg ArubsecensEskFlamingo-1.jpg ArubsecensEskFlamingo-2.jpg Axphoenix-1.jpg Axphoenix-2.jpg
     
  3. AlainK

    AlainK Renowned Contributor Forums Moderator Maple Society 10 Years

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    After a cold wave and a bit of snow :

    acerp-arakawa_260117a.jpg acerp-bihoo_260117a.jpg acerp_sangok02_260117a.jpg acer-gris01_260117a.jpg
     
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  4. Garry Oak

    Garry Oak Member

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    Sorry to ask what may be a stupid question but, is that first photo showing healthy bark?
     
  5. AlainK

    AlainK Renowned Contributor Forums Moderator Maple Society 10 Years

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    Yes, 'Arakawa' is one of the few J. maples that shows a cork bark. The rough bark develops on branches aged 3-4 years.
    'Hubbles super cork', 'Ibo nishiki', and 'Nishiki Gawa' are others.
     
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  6. emery

    emery Renowned Contributor Maple Society 10 Years

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    Yes, there are only 9 in total, out of the thousands of cultivars. Such JMs belong to the Pinebark Group. Seedlings of Ara-kawa and Nishiki-gawa are sometimes Pinebark Group themselves/, so it's fun to grow them.

    With respect to my friend Alain, the second word in Japanese maples from Japan is never capitalized unless it is a proper name. "gawa" is a standard pronunciation change (rendaku) of "kawa" meaning river, so that the whole name Nishiki-gawa means Brocade of River, a nice thing to visualize. Demonstrating how confusing these names can be, 'Ara-kawa' means "Rough bark", although this kawa is a homophone of the kawa meaning river, it has a different kanji character which tells us the true meaning.

    The excellent Pinebark Group 'Alan's Gold' which combines golden spring/summer leaves with the rough bark, is now available in Europe, good news as it's one of the most interesting new cultivars. I've never seen 'Hubble's Super Cork', not sure if it has made it over yet.

    Cheers, -E
     
    Last edited: Jan 22, 2026
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