Monthly Archives: April 2026

Spring is Japanese Maple Time

Acer Palmatum ‘Katsura’ Leaves
Heatherwood Spring

Our Katsura is one of the first Japanese maples to leaf out in the spring. It has these beautiful yellow leaves outlined along the edges in red. It pops out among our other conifers and deciduous trees. Currently we have it planted in an open area in our woodland garden section. The leaves get a little scorched in late summer. Finding the right spot in our harsh eastern Washington summer environment is difficult and requires a bit of trial and error. Should I be patient and wait for other trees in the woodland to get larger and provide some afternoon shade, or should I make the move now and transplant it in a more protected area?

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Good Friends and Japanese Maples

Shin Deshojo and Crimson Queen
Heatherwood Japanese Garden

Good friends and Japanese maples go hand in hand. When I first returned to Washington from Pennsylvania in 2016, my long-term friends from the Ravenna area in Seattle and I took a stroll in the Washington Arboretum to see the spring highlights. We walked through the Japanese maple area and saw a beautiful pinkish red maple displaying its brilliant spring color. I asked if they knew what it was. They said that it was a Shin Deshojo and that they had one in their garden. It was one of their favorites. I knew that I really wanted to add one to my new home. I searched around and could not find one in our Eastern Washington area. A year later they came to visit and said they had a little surprise for me. As they drove up, I saw a beautiful little tree in the bed of their truck. It was their beautiful little Shin Deshojo in its broken pot. In needed to be replanted and thought my new garden would just be the right place. It became one of the maples that started the foundation of what is now our Heatherwood Japanese garden.

Today it gracefully displays its form and color next to our house along with other Japanese maples and dogwoods. The trouble is that even though it adds to the beauty of the garden, it is difficult to get a clear photograph of the tree by itself. Below is an image of its beautiful leaves.

Shin Deshojo Emerging Spring Leaves

The image in the top header is of our second Shin Deshojo that was added a couple of years later. It is planted more in the open and gets quite a bit more sun. We now have almost 100 Japanese maples in our garden. They range from established trees to small one-gallon starters. Every time I walk through our garden I think of our wonderful friends and our joint love of Japanese maples. Thank you Janet and Larry!

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First Crabapple Blooms

Crabapple Grove
Heatherwood Spring

The first of our crabapples have started blooming. For several days the flower buds kept getting bigger and bigger. Then two days ago they just started bursting open. There are seven different varieties of crabapples in our Heatherwood garden. They all reach their peak bloom at different times. This brings us a gift of blooming crabapples for around two weeks. The crabapples highlight the south east corner of the garden as the field of daffodils decline.

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A Blue Sky Afternoon

Cherry Allee & Neighbor’s Pasture
Heatherwood Spring

With all the turmoil surrounding us, it is important to step back and reflect on what is right about the world. What is better to be thankful for than a peaceful sunny late afternoon with a blue sky above. This is just the spot to relax and enjoy the day and nature’s landscape surrounding our home. Soon the blossoms of the Pink Flair cherries will fall. Leaves of the cherries and birches and oaks below will emerge. A little later, the planting bed between the cherries will be full of colorful perennials. Horses will be grazing in the pasture. You will find us sitting on the rocks dangling our feet amongst the flowers.

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The Redbuds Are Blooming

Don Egolf Redbud & Hokkeji Lantern
Heatherwood Japanese-Influenced Garden

Yesterday afternoon I stepped out of our front door and was greeted by the afternoon sun gracing over our entryway Hokkeji Japanese lantern and Don Egolf redbud. I quickly grabbed my camera and started a stroll through our garden.

The Don Egolf is the first of Heatherwood’s eleven reduds to bloom this year. Three other Don Egolf redbuds in the woodland garden are just getting ready to burst out. The Hokkeji Japanese lantern and the Don Egolf welcome visitors as they walk along the path leading to the Japanese-influenced garden. In a week or two, the Japanese maples along the pathway will open up with their flush of brilliant spring color.

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Beauty is Fleeting

Akebono Flowering Cherry
Heatherwood Spring

It pays to stroll through the garden every day at this time of year. New blooms burst out every day. In this case with our Akebono cherries, the glory of the full bloom only lasted one day. The temperature dropped into the 20’s the day that the cherries burst out in full bloom. The next morning the bright white blossoms were brown.

Garden strolls remind me to stay in the present and enjoy each and every moment. When I see something that catches my eye, I take the time to stop and explore it. I sometimes get close and touch the plant and feel its uniqueness. Who knows, tomorrow it may change.

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