| Description | Bloodgood Japanese Maple (Acer palmatum atropurpureum) One of the more popular red foliage Japanese Maples, especially in zone #5. |
|---|---|
| Pronunciation | (AYE-ser)(pal-MA-tum) |
| Plant Type | All Plants, Trees Deciduous |
| Hardiness Zone | (5)6-8 |
| Sunlight | full sun, mostly sunny, partial shade |
| Moisture | average, moist, avoid dry |
| Soil & Site | average, moist, avoid dry |
| Fruit | Samaras (winged seeds) in April and ripen to red in summer, turning brown in the winter. |
| Leaves | simple, palmate, 5-7 lobes, wine-red or burgundy |
| Dimensions | 15-25 feet with age |
| Maintenance | There may be a problem with early leaves getting burned from late frosts. |
| Propagation | In order to maintain the true cultivar, it must be grown from cuttings or grafted. |
| Cultivar Origin | Named after the Bloodgood Nursery (Long Island, New York USA) who first introduced the plant to the United States. |
| Author's Notes | This has proven to be one of the hardier Japanese Maples in our region. (zone #5) |