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Autumn Blaze Maple

The Autumn Blaze Maple is a classic oval-shaped shade tree with incredibly stylish orange/red fall color. It grows quickly and will brighten your yard in the autumn with a splash of brilliant orange/red leaves. The color often lasts longer than many other species of maple. Plant this tree if you want to brighten up your neighborhood in the fall, reduce your cooling bill in the summer or provide habitat for songbirds. Deliberately hybridized, cultivated Autumn Blaze Maples exhibit sterility but can have small clusters of samara (i.e. dry fruit).

Ginkgo Tree

The Ginkgo Biloba is a beautiful, slow growing deciduous tree that has “leathery” green leaves in summer, turning brilliant yellow in the fall. Its fan shaped leaves are quite unique and closely resemble that of the maidenhair fern plant. The Ginkgo is frequently referred to as “the maidenhair tree”. This ancient tree is highly resistant to insects, deer and pollution. It thrives in urban plantings, likes sandy well drained soil but adapts to clay soils as well. The Ginkgo growth pattern is unique in that it grows straight up without branching outward for between 8-10 years and then begins fanning out its canopy. Not a fast-growing tree but one certainly worth the wait! Initially thought to be extinct, Ginkgo Biloba is the only surviving specie of the family Ginkgoaceae. Considered Endangered in the wild, the Ginkgo is a living fossil dating back to the Middle Jurassic Period @ 180 million years. A few small tracts of “wild” Ginkgo’s exist today, and only in Southern Asia.

Hackberry

The Common Hackberry can grow in just about any soil, PH and moisture range. A medium to fast growing deciduous shade tree, the Hackberry grows in a pyramidal shape when young, the eventually fills out with a broad, arching canopy when mature. It has bright green leaves with serrated points on the top third and turns to a lovely yellow in fall. Mature Hackberry’s trunk-bark develops into a series of “ridges and valley’s” of irregular shape which is its unmistakable characteristic. Its fruit are small oblong “drupes” which start out red in summer, ripen and turn purple in early-mid autumn. They remain on the tree throughout winter and provide non-migrating birds a valuable food source for the winter