The Standard Journal

New trees can help add Fall colors to any yard

- By Gibson Priest

It won’t be long now: Nature will again be painting her most spectacula­r Georgia landscapes in the coming weeks.

The brilliant hues of fall foliage splashed onto Georgia this fall will make many homeowners wish they could capture more of the annual color show in their own yards.

Polk County landowners can have brilliant fall leaves in their yards in an easier and more reliable way: just buy any of the many terrific ornamental shade trees that provide rich fall colors and can be bought in Polk County.

Many shade trees give us excellent fall color. Some are more commonly known while others are lesser known but deserve wider attention.

Bare-root and balled-and-bur-lapped trees can be bought for transplant­ing into your yards in February. Container trees, because they have virtually no transplant shock, can be planted any time.

Here are some of the trees you can buy from Georgia nurseries and garden centers that can fill your yard with fall colors:

♦ Maidenhair tree (ginkgo) is unsurpasse­d in the fall for the clear yellow color of its fan-shaped leaves.

♦ Scarlet Oak is usually the last tree in Georgia to develop fall color. The foliage becomes a brilliant red in late October or in November.

♦ Sourwood, a native in the northern half of Georgia, this tree is seldom planted in yards. But it has almost every desirable trait as an ornamental tree, including picturesqu­e shape, excellent green foliage, attractive flowers and seed pods and brilliant red fall leaves.

♦ Sugar maple is well known for its brilliant yellow, orange and scarlet fall colors.

♦ Southern sugar maple, a native tree which produces bright colors, is not very common in Georgia nurseries. But ask for it.

♦ Trident maple is another somewhat new maple. It is a small, handsome and durable tree with potentiall­y outstandin­g fall color.

♦ Japanese maple is one of the most spectacula­r of the small trees that can be grown in Georgia.

If you have any questions regarding your planting or fall gardening plans, please contact the extension office at 770-749-2142 or email uge2233@uga.edu.

For more informatio­n and details on upcoming events, check out the Polk County Extension office on Facebook by searching “UGA Extension Polk County.”

 ?? ?? Gibson Priest
Gibson Priest

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