Grafted Kwanzan Japanese cherry (prunus serrulata)
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The ‘Kanzan’ cherry tree (sometimes spelled ‘Kwanzan’, especially in English) is a Japanese ornamental cherry tree 🌸, spectacular in spring and very popular in parks and gardens.
🌸 ‘Kwanzan’ cherry tree (Prunus serrulata ‘Kwanzan’)
🔎 Identity
- Scientific name: Prunus serrulata ‘Kanzan’
- Family: Rosaceae
- Origin: Japanese horticultural selection
- Type: Spring-flowering ornamental tree
🌳 Size & Habit
- Height: 6 to 10 m
- Spread: 5 to 8 m
- Habit: initially upright (V-shaped), then more spreading with age
- Moderately fast growth
🌸 Flowering
- Period: April to early May (depending on climate)
- Flowers: double, bright pink to soft pink, very dense
- Visual effect: spectacular—the tree appears to be covered in pink pom-poms
- Special feature: sterile—does not produce fruit
🍂 Foliage
- Young foliage is bronze/coppery, turning green in summer
- Fall: pretty shades of yellow, orange, sometimes red
- Deciduous: loses its leaves in winter
❄️ Hardiness
- Zone: 5 to 8
- Withstands temperatures down to about -23°C
- Cold-hardy, but sensitive to late frosts during flowering
🌱 Cultivation
- Exposure: full sun
- Soil: rich, well-drained, fairly neutral to slightly acidic
- Tolerance: resistant to urban pollution, but does not like heavy, waterlogged soils
- Care:
- Minimal pruning, just to remove dead wood
- Susceptible to certain diseases (e.g., monilia, canker, aphids), but nothing alarming if the tree is well cared for
✅ Ornamental interest
- 🌸 Spectacular flowering
- 🍁 Beautiful fall foliage
- 🌳 Graceful habit
- Ideal as a specimen tree, in a row, or in a Japanese garden
❌ Disadvantages
- No fruit (or very rarely, inedible)
- Fairly short-lived for a tree (20 to 30 years on average)
- Somewhat susceptible to disease if the climate is too humid
📍 Note
The ‘Kanzan’ cherry tree is widely used in cherry blossom festivals (Hanami), particularly in the United States, Canada, and Japanese gardens in Europe.