Vine maple works like Japanese maple.

Japanese maples became so popular for their novelty that they are no longer novel. The diversity of their many cultivars is their primary appeal now. Vine maple, Acer circinatum, lacks such diversity, but is actually more novel. It is native from Mendocino County to the southwestern corner of British Columbia. Yet, it is very rarely available at nurseries here.

Vine maple has not been in cultivation for nearly as long as Japanese maple has. This is why its diversity is limited to not much more than a dozen cultivars. Its cultivars are even rarer than the simple species. Only a few ever become available, and almost exclusively by online purchase. Consequently, with very few exceptions, they are initially very small.

Vine maple grows somewhat like Japanese maple, typically with a few sculptural trunks. With regular pruning, it can stay as short as ten feet. It rarely grows more than twenty feet tall. The lobes of its palmate leaves are wider than those of Japanese maple. Leaves are only about three inches long and wide. Foliage develops bright orange color for autumn.

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