Sherbrooke Record

Some maples (sugar) are more desirable than others

- By Lee Reich

LENNOXVILL­E

Saint George’s Anglican Church, Lennoxvill­e, 84 Queen Streeet. On the 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 5th Sundays we have Holy Communion Service and Sunday School class. Services begin at 11:00 a.m. On the 4th Sunday we have Service of the Word. Services begin at 11:00 a.m. 819-346-5564.

SHERBROOKE

THE RIGHT REVERAND BRUCE MYERS, Bishop of the Diocese of Quebec will preside over Holy Communion and deliver a homily at the Church of the Advent, 473 Bowen South (near Hotel Dieu), on Sunday, October 20 at 1 p.m. Tea and coffee to follow the service.

Presbyteri­an

LENNOXVILL­E

St. Andrew’s Presbyteri­an Church, 256 Queen St., Lennoxvill­e, 819-569-3100, Sundays: 10:30 a.m. Worship and Sunday School.

United AYER’S CLIFF - MAGOG

Ayer’s Cliff - Magog - Georgevill­e Pastoral Charge welcomes everyone for Sunday service at Beulah United Church in Ayer’s Cliff - Worship service and Sunday School 9:15 a.m. and St. Paul’s United Church, Magog - Worship Service and Sunday School 11:15 a.m. with lunch provided each Sunday following the service in Magog. Minister: Rev. Lee Ann Hogle 819-571-7233.

LENNOXVILL­E

Lennoxvill­e United Church, corner of Queen and Church Street, welcomes you to worship at 10:00 a.m. on October 20 with Bruce Gilbert. Guest speaker Jen Cianca. Everyone is welcome. 819-5658449; website - lennoxvill­eunitedchu­rch.com

SHERBROOKE

Please join us at Plymouth-trinity United Church, corner of Dufferin and Terrill in Sherbrooke, 819-346-6373, www.plymouthtr­initychurc­h.org, for our worship service on Sunday, October 20, at 10:30 a.m., with guest worship leader Janet Mcburney; in addition, Shanna Bernier will be sharing details about her trip to Israel and Palestine. And save the date: Our UCW ham and salad pre-christmas buffet and sale will be Nov. 2! Joignez-vous à nous pour notre culte dominical le 20 octobre, à 10h30. Cordiale bienvenue à tout le monde. Et réservez la date : notre buffet et vente d’avant Noël se tiendra le 2 novembre! Minister: Samuel V. Dansokho.

WATERVILLE/NORTH HATLEY

Waterville/north Hatley United Church, Sunday, October 20, 11 a.m., Worship with Carolyn Linde. Sunday School. Rev. Mead Baldwin 819-837-1112.

It’s not easy to figure out which maples you want on your property. The good ones are the sugar maples, their leaves ablaze each fall in yellow, red and orange. The less desirable ones are the Norway maples, their leaves green well into fall.

I don’t hold that lingering greenness against Norway maples. What I do hold against them is the way they leaf out so early in spring, suddenly creating deep shade, shade so dark that nothing, including lawn, can grow underneath.

THE SUCCESS OF NORWAY MAPLE

Compound this dense shade with extreme fecundity, tolerance to pollution, and the ability to grow under a wide range of light and soil conditions, and we have - as government officials might put it - a situation.

Norway maple is an invasive plant that has escaped from cultivatio­n to displace sugar maple and shade to death spring wildflower­s such as Dutchman’s breeches, dog-tooth violet and mayapple. These wildflower­s rely on early season sunlight to build up enough reserves to carry them through the winter and flower the following spring.

With its ability to grow fast and transplant easily, Norway maple’s popularity once seemed secure. The plant was brought over from Europe by the “father of American botany,” John Bartram, who offered it in his nursery catalogue in 1726.

Over the years, this tree became popular for lining streets and gracing yards, and hordes of varieties were named. You may not have heard of Crimson King, a variety with deep red leaves, but you’ve surely seen it. There are also varieties with yellow-splashed leaves (Leopoldi) or narrow, upright growth habit (Columnare), or red leaves and narrow, upright growth habit (Crimson Sentry).

IS IT A SUGAR OR NORWAY MAPLE?

Fecundity and winged seeds have made Norway maple too much of a good thing, so I’m yanking out any small plants that I come upon. Larger trees that have gained foothold in forests and fields can be done in by merely cutting away a ring of bark from the trunk at whatever height is most convenient.

Before killing any Norway maple, it is necessary to positively identify it; unfortunat­ely, the maple that comes closest in appearance is our native, slower growing sugar maple.

One way to tell them apart is by their barks. The bark of Norway maple has regular grooves while an older sugar maple’s bark has thick, irregular plates.

For a less subtle identifier, look at a maple’s fruit, the “airplane” familiar to everyone. The two wings of a Norway maple seed spread at almost a 180 degree angle from each other, while those of a sugar maple hang down together at a much narrower angle.

Maples that are too young to flower are harder to tell apart, but you can do it by looking at the leaves. Start by cutting the leaf stalk and squeezing out some sap. If the sap is white, it’s a Norway maple; sugar maples have clear sap.

If you have a known sugar or Norway maple leaf for comparison, you’ll also see that the leaves of a Norway maple are broader compared to their height than those of sugar maple. Also, Norway maple leaves have more lobes, typically five to seven, compared with the sugar maple’s three to five, and the indented portion between the lobes of sugar maple will be more rounded. Get out a magnifying glass, flip a leaf over, and look along the major veins on the underside of a leaf. If you see pale hairs there, you’ve got a sugar maple leaf in hand.

The easiest way to tell these two maples apart is by leaf colour. During the growing season, Norway maple’s leaves are dark green, much darker than those of sugar maple. And in autumn, when Norway maple leaves do finally turn colour, it’s just yellow - pretty to some people, but sickly looking to me. Online: http://www.leereich.com/blog http://leereich.com

(The Associated Press)

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