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Japanese Azalea
Latin Name:
Acer saccharum
location:
Japan Korea Manchuria Russian Far East
The Japanese Azalea, which has for Latin name Acer saccharum, lives around Japan, Korea, Manchuria, Russian Far East. It can generally be recognized as deciduous, making it a very interesting plant! In the summer, its foliage is more or less alternate and in the automn it generally looks like poor yellow or no color. The Japanese Azalea (Acer saccharum) has beautiful flowers that are large terminal panicles of whitish blooms and contains fruits that are small blackish drupes, taken by birds or drop early. It has a beautiful Bark, where we can see rough gray with prickles on it. A fact to point at about its culture would be that easy to grow, adapted to any well-drained soil However, a bad thing with the Japanese Azalea can be that coarse appearance in winter It can be easy to recognize a Acer saccharum having its thick, coarse unbranched stems. The Japanese Azalea's propagation is uncommon since it is mainly done by seed
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