JohnFranklin - Zone 7b
Yamadori
Any input will be appreciated. Is it fair to say, given American Hornbeam are slow growers, that they bud and harden off, well after Maples and Chinese\Siberian Elms? Generally speaking of course.
Many thanks and an added bonus, unless you are in western Maryland, we are experiencing very similar weather.My American hornbeam is the last thing to bud out in my garden. Well after maples and elms.
That late flushing logic, I would surmise holds true for other shade tolerant, slow growing trees as well?Yes.
They flush out later than all of these, and even though their growth is as fast as the rest, because of the late start, they also finish later.
I think they're called slow growers because they don't have a multiple growth system like maples and elms.
This late flushing is a evolutionary trick for them to stay in the shade in woodlands, and not burn their foliage off from unfiltered sunlight. Quite neat when you think about it.
Yes.
They flush out later than all of these, and even though their growth is as fast as the rest, because of the late start, they also finish later.
I think they're called slow growers because they don't have a multiple growth system like maples and elms.
This late flushing is a evolutionary trick for them to stay in the shade in woodlands, and not burn their foliage off from unfiltered sunlight. Quite neat when you think about it.
That late flushing logic, I would surmise holds true for other shade tolerant, slow growing trees as well?
My American hornbeam is the last thing to bud out in my garden. Well after maples and elms.
That's great! A tree in the woods would be unhappy with short internodes and doesn't care about fall color though. We have different priorities than plants, it seems.Neat theory, but I find mine grow better in full sun.
I wouldn't call American hornbeam a slow grower, I collected a small one last year with maybe a 1 inch trunk, left it about 12 inches tall, and it grew about 5 ft, with branches and a leader thicker than a pencil, and I was lazy with the fertilizer. American Beech on the other hand...snail speed ahead.Any input will be appreciated. Is it fair to say, given American Hornbeam are slow growers, that they bud and harden off, well after Maples and Chinese\Siberian Elms? Generally speaking of course.
I think it depends on where you got the tree from, I got mine in wet heavy understory woods and it took a few years to get use to a lot of sun, they were getting sunburn on the leaves and bark, much like a maple.Neat theory, but I find mine grow better in full sun. They're very shade tolerant, and they are equally healthy in full shade or sun, but with full sun the internodes are shorter, the leaves are smaller, and the fall color is better. I always suspected the delayed first flush had something to do with avoiding frost. Some trees leaf out early to beat the competition, but that comes at the cost of needing to be ready for a late freeze.