#Acer palmatum 'Atropurpureum'
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aisphotostuff · 1 month ago
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Acer Autumn Leaves London..Acer palmatum 'Atropurpureum
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Acer Autumn Leaves London..Acer palmatum 'Atropurpureum by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: In the autumn months, Acers create some of the most spectacular garden displays. From golden-yellow to firey red to dark purples, they are sure to guarantee fantastic autumn shades..Acer palmatum ‘Atropurpureum’ A slow-growing acer with fantastic red-purple leaves which turn to a brilliant bright red in autumn. Ideal as a small tree – keep it in a light area to bring out the darkest purple ‘Atropurpureum’ has to offer
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anskupics · 1 year ago
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Acer palmatum ’Atropurpureum’ — Japanese maple a.k.a. palmate maple a.k.a. smooth Japanese maple
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wanderinggabe · 2 years ago
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Fiery Momiji “Japanese red maple in the cultivar group atropurpureum is a versatile, ornamental, hardy small tree or multi-stemmed shrub. The deeply lobed 5-7-9 leaves are red or reddish-purple in spring and again in fall. In between, color varies from remaining red all summer to sometimes fading slightly with maturity or summer heat and even turning green.” Excerpt from Japanese Red Maple Acer palmatum var. atr - https://www.arborday.org/trees/treeguide/TreeDetail.cfm?ItemID=866 . . . . . . . . . . . . #iger #igerph #igermanila #igerphilippines #osaka #japan2022 #japan #autumn #autumn2022 #travel #travelphoto #travelphotography #solotravel #hiroshima #itsukushima #miyajima #momiji #japanesemaple mapletree #iphonephoto #iphonephotography #iphone12promax #iphone12 https://www.instagram.com/p/CnJ0Z1Wp41v/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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gardenshrubs · 9 months ago
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windfallgardenschenleyfarms · 10 months ago
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Japanese Maple Propagation by Hardwood Cuttings 
Culture and Propagation of Japanese Maple
Guy Phillips
Professional Paper submitted to the Faculty of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Forestry
As mentioned previously, hardwood cuttings are those that are taken during the dormant season. For a deciduous species such as Japanese maple, this means that the cutting is merely a stick with some dormant buds that is stuck in a suitable medium. The lack of foliage allows a propagator to forget the worrisome balance between keeping leaf surfaces evenly moist while at the same time maintaining the medium at a state not too moist, and well aerated. For hardwood cuttings, bottom heat is recommended, but air temperatures can remain cool, ideally below the 15.5oC (60oF) range, especially at night. These environmental factors – no misting, moderate bottom heat, and little to no air heat result in a very economically efficient way to propagate. The fact that dormant cuttings are taken during the time of year when nursery activity is all but dormant too, means another kind of economy and efficiency is achieved as well: the economy and efficiency of time. One paper from the annals of the Combined Proceedings of the International Plant Propagator's Society stood almost alone on this subject. I include a summary of it here because I consider the notion of hardwood cuttings of Japanese maple to be of unrealized merit. 
The experiment with hardwood cuttings was begun due to a surplus of grafting scion material. The greatest success has been had with Acer palmatum 'Atropurpureum' varieties. This is the name commonly given to Japanese maples that have red colored leaves of varying shades and retain this trait, in varying degrees, when propagated from seed. Successful rooting and survival of this variety has been between 60 – 70%. However, experiments with the dissected leaf varieties have proven more challenging, as is common for these same types when propagated by softwood cuttings. Success is often as low as 25% (Carville, 1975). 
Cuttings were taken from field stock plants during the first week of January (Rhode Island). Material was between 4.8 - 9.5 mm (3/16 – 3/8 inch) thickness; possessing 2 –3 nodes. The previous season’s growth is taken, ideally as thick as possible, 15 - 20 cm (6 –8 inches) long. Wounds were made, 2 on each cutting, 19 - 25 mm (3/4 - 1 inch) long. Many hormonal solutions have been tried and Jiffy Grow TM was found to be the best. (10 second dip; 29 mL (1 oz.) Jiffy GrowTM to 87 mL (3 oz.) water; Jiffy GrowTM is a mixture of IBA .5%, NAA .5%. boron .0175%, phenylmercuric acid .01%). Medium is a 2 parts peat / 1 part perlite. Medium was slightly firmed and watered; cuttings were stuck; all was watered again then “ignored”. The temperature of the medium was kept between 15.5 - 20oC (60 – 68 ̊F). Air temperatures were kept below 20oC (60 ̊F) at night; no mention of the daytime temperatures. “Excessive top heat and /or overwatering will lead to complete failure, thus my statement to the effect that the cuttings should be ignored. The medium should feel almost dry to the touch and at no time during the first 4 weeks should you be able to squeeze water from a handful of the mix (Carville, 1975, p. 40)" 
Roots appear in about 4 weeks (callus in 15 days). Vegetative buds will soon be swelling after roots have been observed. It is imperative not to overwater during this time. Roots will rot very easily at this point. Newly emerging leaves need shading. A mild fungicidal solution is thought to be helpful in controlling Botrytis fungal infection. By mid- March the rooted cuttings can be potted, perhaps planted into fields directly in milder climates. 3.77 - 7.5 L (1 – 2 gallon) potted plants can be expected to reach 30 - 38 cm (12 – 15 inches) tall by late August (Carville, 1975). 
Carville (1975) concludes by noting, “Unit cost of production is far less than that from softwood cuttings and is considerably less than that from graftage (p. 41).” Another advantage he mentions is that rooted hardwood cuttings are in “phase” with the normal spring time growing conditions and therefore no extra work nor fuss needs to be placed on the necessity of forcing growth before fall, as is the case with softwood cuttings (Carville, 1975). 
I found only one other article on the subject of hardwood cuttings of Japanese maple. A researcher in Poland used Acer palmatum var. atropurpureum (again, this name indicates generic red leaf Japanese maple) to test various times and temperatures of storage of hardwood material prior to sticking into pots of a 1:1 peat and sand medium. It was found that cuttings obtained in November, stored in plastic bags at 55.4 ̊F for 3 weeks and then stored at 35.6 ̊F for 6 weeks worked best. The researcher suggests that the storage period improves callus and root initiation so that the timing of root growth does not lag behind the development of bud break, once the cuttings are stuck (Marcinkowski, 1988). 
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January 18, 2024 Nothing to lose trying to root these Red Cut Leaf Japanese Maples cuttings from a branch vandalized & broken off a once beautiful healthy potted tree at Oakland Ave. & Forbes in Oakland.
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ethnoplants · 2 years ago
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Graines d'érable du Japon disponibles sur le site ethnoplants.
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blueandyellowdiamond · 2 years ago
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Acer palmatum 'Atropurpureum' je krásna odroda Javora dlaňolistého, ktorá na jar a v lete produkuje elegantné hlboko laločnaté fialové listy.
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Acer palmatum Attropupureum, Roter Fächerahorn 'Atropurpureum
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ilpianetaverde · 2 years ago
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Vendo 30 semi di Acero Palmato Rosso Giapponese su Wallapop
Ti interessa? https://wallapop.com/item/30-semi-di-acero-palmato-rosso-giapponese-855766904?_pid=wi&_me=s_android
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cromulentbookreview · 6 years ago
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Acer palmatum 'Atropurpureum'!
Yes,  Acer palmatum 'Atropurpureum'!  AKA Bloodleaf (also called Bloodgood). Described by Monrovia as a “ delightful small tree with gracefully branched stems that hold beautiful, palmate, red-purple leaves.” This deciduous tree is hardy to US Zones 5-8 (I have no idea what zones that’d be in the UK, Australia or New Zealand sorry guys), prefers partial-to-full sun exposure, requires regular watering, and will reach up to 18 ft (5.4 meters) in height! The beautiful red-purple foliage turns an even more brilliant red in the fall! I mean, just look at this gorgeous tree:
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Fuck yeah, Japanese maples. Did you know there are over 1000 cultivars of Japanese maple? They’re gorgeous. 
This is a gardening blog, right?
No?
Shit. 
Whatever, nobody cares.
And by that, I mean: Bloodleaf by Crystal Smith!
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I wasn’t kidding about how amazing Japanese maples are. Seriously, if you’re in a compatible zone (most are 5-8 on the USDA hardiness zone map, which includes the western areas of the Pacific Northwest, fuck yeah!). Anyway, the eponymous bloodleaf of Smith’s novel do not belong to a Japanese maple. It’s more like a flowering ground cover, like a little white, three-petaled Lobelia. Only super duper poisonous and the only safe part are the petals, which can save lives, but are practically impossible to harvest. Hurray?
Anyway! Book review! That’s what this blog is for. Not for recommending various plants that I like. It is for reviewing books. I’m pretty sure no one actually reads these, though, so I can include whatever the fuck I want. My favorite Japanese maple? Well, I don’t just have one, but I am partial to lace leaf Japanese maples, because the leaves are just so damn pretty...
Bloodleaf! By! Crystal! Smith! I am capable of focus!
Princess Aurelia of Renault is having a hell of a time - for one, everyone thinks she’s a witch, a crime punishable by death in her country. Even being accused of being a witch is enough to get you hanged by the neck until dead. Or burned. Seems like the preferred method in Renault is hanging, but burnings work, too.
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What, did you think there weren’t going to be Monty Python gifs here? 
Everyone in Renault, even the royal family, lives in fear of the Tribunal, a shady organization that apparently has jurisdiction over witches and seems to possess absolute power. The public is on the side of the Tribunal (witches = bad), so the fact that Aurelia is rumored to be a witch isn’t exactly great.
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The fact that she is, indeed, a witch, is even worse. Aurelia is a blood mage - she can see spirits of the dead and do magic with her blood. Fun! I wish I could do magic whenever I get a paper cut - if that were the case, I’d be doing magic all the time at work. Or whenever my cat springboards off me or I nearly slice my thumb off shredding Parmesan cheese. Anyway: Aurelia has to keep her witchy-ness secret re: regular hangings and burnings. Aurelia has been engaged to Prince Valentin of the neighboring kingdom of Achelva since infancy. Things look a bit better for witches in Achelva, which sounds great, but Valentin himself? Not so much. Valentin is rumored to be a weak and infirm invalid who rarely ever leaves his rooms. The current king of Achelva, Domnhall (no relation to the beautiful, red-headed Domnhall Gleeson) is the worst. He’s basically Donald Trump in everything but name. So Aurelia isn’t overly thrilled at her upcoming marriage, but she’s eager to get the hell out of Dodge before people catch on that she’s a witch, holding out to the hope that, in uniting her country with Achelva and becoming a queen, she can lessen the influence of the Tribunal and make things better for her fellow witches.
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(Seriously, did you think I wasn’t going to use Monty Python gifs here?)
That’s all well and good, but just as Aurelia is getting ready to head off to Achelva, the Tribunal stages a coup - Aurelia’s mom, the Queen, is captured, while Aurelia and her little brother Conrad, the future king of Renault, just barely manage to escape.  Things get even worse when the people who helped Aurelia escape Renault turn on her. They take Conrad and head off to Achelva with an impostor posing as Aurelia, while the real Aurelia just barely manages to escape being murdered.
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Now stuck in Achelva with no money, no friends, no papers, nothing, Aurelia has to do her best to survive. Then a handsome stranger called Zan steals her horse. Well, he tries to pay for it after the fact, but still. The only thing Achelva has going for it is that Aurelia can now practice her blood magic without fear of immediate hanging and/or burning. But there’s still the fact that the Tribunal still has her mother hostage back home, and Conrad is in the hands of the impostor and her Tribunal-loyal father. Plus there’s something weird happening within the walls of the city-state of Achelva. Old magical protections seem to be failing and Zan is determined not only to find out why, but also find a way to stop it. When he learns that Aurelia (now calling herself Emilie) is a blood mage, he offers to teach her how to use her power in order to save his country. Can Aurelia manage to save her family and Achelva and Renault from the grips of the Tribunal without dying a horrible death?
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Good luck with that, Aurelia/Emilie!
Sometimes its hard for me to be objective about books that I enjoy. If I like a book, I’m willing to forgive most of its flaws, embrace the story and roll with it. For the most part, the books I review here on this stupid tumblr blog are books that I’ve liked. I don’t really want to waste my time slogging through a book that I don’t like. Life’s too short, if I don’t like something, I’m not going to read it. If I like a book, I’ll finish reading it, even if it takes me a while. 
And then sometimes I encounter a book like Witchmark or The Binding books which, once I started reading them, I literally could not stop and now I love them forever holy shit those books are so good you guys, you should buy copies of both right now I am not joking, Jesu Christi people, READ THEM!
Uhm. 
Bloodleaf happens to be among the latter. It’s one of those books where I started reading and then would not stop. I remained at the gym for an extra ten minutes just so I could finish a chapter. I was ready to hiss at anyone or anything that would stop me reading. For example:
Housemate: hey, we’ve got a bunch of old bananas here, would you be willing to make banana bread tonight?
Me, reading Bloodleaf:
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Needless to say, I enjoyed this book a lot. It has its flaws typical to YA fantasy (mostly just some weak characterization and worldbuilding) but once I got going I really didn’t care. I went into full YA Fangirl Mode. And once I enter Fangirl Mode it’s difficult to convince me not to like or enjoy something.
Plus there’s a bunch of not-so-subtle Donald Trump references to the regent of Achleva, who is definitely a Trump-type. One of the characters even refers to him, sarcastically, as a “stable genius.” Another character tells him, very publicly: “Facts is facts. Wishin’ ’em false and declarin’ ’em fake don’t make it so.”
Heee. I see what you did there, Crystal Smith. I see what you did there! And I very much enjoy it.
So if you’re looking for a strong, female-led YA fantasy novel featuring blood magic and the occasional witch burning, Bloodleaf is the book for you. And a brilliant scarlet-leaved Acer palmatum var. atropurpureum is the tree you’ll be wanting for your garden. Don’t let it die of a fungus like mine did. RIP, Mr. Bloodgood. You were a tree that I got for free.
RECOMMENDED FOR: Fans of YA fantasy with a strong female lead, magic, romance, etc.
NOT RECOMMENDED FOR: Anyone who came here legitimately hoping to read about Japanese maples, non-YA fans, people who can’t stand the idea of a kickass female protagonist.
TRIGGER WARNING: Midway through the book there’s a scene of a very violent near-rape - be warned and prepare accordingly. If that’s really not your thing then you may want to steer clear.
RATING: 4/5
TOTALLY UNBIASED FANGIRL RATING: 500,000,000/5
RELEASE DATE: March 12, 2019
ANTICIPATION LEVEL FOR SEQUEL: Chhogori
TREE RATING: Eucalyptus regnans
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ebaeschnbliah · 4 years ago
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As red as blood ...
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aisphotostuff · 2 months ago
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Acer palmatum 'Atropurpureum'
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Acer palmatum 'Atropurpureum' by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Acer palmatum 'Atropurpureum' A slow-growing shrubby tree with purple-red leaves that turn scarlet in autumn
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anskupics · 1 year ago
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Acer palmatum ’Atropurpureum’ — Japanese maple a.k.a. palmate maple a.k.a. smooth Japanese maple
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atlanticnortzac · 7 years ago
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My personal bonsai project from seeds...
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meetinginsamarra · 2 years ago
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Evening Light
Yesterday, lovely soft early evening light made the colours glow in the front garden.
Stachys byzanthina (silver), Alchemilla mollis (yellow), Acer palmatum “atropurpureum” (red), Sedum acre (pink-ish), Quercus robur in the background (dark green)
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addindashopping · 5 years ago
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30pcs Japanese Maple Tree Bonsai Seeds Acer Palmatum Atropurpureum Plant Garden
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30pcs Japanese Maple Tree Bonsai Seeds Acer Palmatum Atropurpureum Plant Garden Auction price: $0.99 Bid count: Buy it now: $0.99 via eBay https://www.ebay.com/itm/30pcs-Japanese-Maple-Tree-Bonsai-Seeds-Acer-Palmatum-Atropurpureum-Plant-Garden/153079674223?hash=item23a442756f:m:mSPKpOpnvuewbK8uQIunzZA
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