Trees and Shrubs for Fall Color

By Amy Howansky

Extend the sea­son of col­or in the gar­den by adding trees and shrubs that have stun­ning leaf, bark, or berry col­or in the fall.

Oxy­den­drum arbore­tum (sour­wood) has dark, glossy leaves dur­ing spring and ear­ly sum­mer, but in July, the leaves start a slow trans­for­ma­tion to peach, then medi­um rust, and final­ly to bril­liant orange-red or pink-red. Its name refers to the sour taste of the leaves, which may con­tribute to its deer resis­tance! Sour­woods pre­fer rich, acidic, non-com­pact­ed, well-drained soils, and from that pref­er­ence, we can tell that they are in the same fam­i­ly as rhodo­den­drons. Hardy to zone 5, sour­wood matures at 2030’ tall by 2030’ wide. 

Sourwood’s del­i­cate flower clus­ters, resem­bling the tas­sels of lily-of-the-val­ley, emerge in ear­ly July, slow­ly swell through mid-July, and then open ful­ly from the end of July through the begin­ning of August to reveal a light fra­grance that attracts hon­ey­bees and oth­er pol­li­na­tors. The showy flow­ers devel­op into green seed pods that slow­ly turn grey-brown and per­sist into the win­ter. From a nurs­ery sales per­spec­tive, I have observed that cus­tomers don’t glance at sour­wood until the creamy-white flow­ers are ful­ly open against the back­drop of vibrant red leaves, and then the trees sell out very quick­ly. Sad­ly, the cus­tomers miss out on observ­ing the slow, beau­ti­ful changes dur­ing flower devel­op­ment and leaf-col­or maturation. 

For bur­gundy-red leaves in fall, try Aro­nia melanocarpa. It is also called choke­ber­ry, but don’t let the name scare you, because the fruit is edi­ble for birds and humans. In the spring, Aro­nia pro­duces tiny white flow­ers held togeth­er in quar­ter-sized clus­ters. In sum­mer, the flow­ers ripen into clus­ters of blue-black fruit, which are sour if eat­en when cooked plain, but more palat­able if reduced to a syrup and driz­zled over ice cream or oat­meal as a great provider of vit­a­min C. 

In the fall, Aronia’s dark green, glossy leaves turn bur­gundy-red or pur­plish. The cul­ti­var Viking’ is 46’ tall by 46’ wide, has a round­ed crown, and tends to be bare twigged at the base. For small spaces, use Low Scape Mound,’ which matures at 1224” tall by 1824” wide. For an alter­na­tive to pachysan­dra, try Ground Hug,’ which grows only 814” tall by 3’ wide.

To get bril­liant orange-red leaf col­or in autumn, install a Fothergilla. There are sev­er­al species and cul­ti­vars avail­able, and all have white, bot­tle brush-shaped flow­ers in the spring before the leaves devel­op. The soft­ly spiked flow­ers sit on bare twigs, which cre­ates an inter­est­ing tex­ture, and might look strik­ing if set in front of a dark green ever­green. After flow­er­ing, the leaves emerge green, thick, and leath­ery. They stay green through­out the sum­mer as the dead flower spikes turn brown and slow­ly dis­in­te­grate. In fall, the leaves turn a mot­tled mix of orange, yel­low-orange, and red-orange. The cul­ti­var Blue Shad­ow’ is hardy to zone 4, gets 35’ tall by 4 — 5’ wide at matu­ri­ty, and sports leaves with a bluish cast, which adds inter­est dur­ing the sum­mer before the autumn color-change.

Rhus aro­mat­i­ca (fra­grant sumac) will also pro­vide a gor­geous autumn dis­play of orange to red-bur­gundy. It is not the species that grows along the road­side, and nei­ther species is poi­so­nous. In fact, the species along the road (Rhus typhi­na) has red, fur­ry seeds that are high in vit­a­min C, and can be added to lemon­ade to make a del­i­cate­ly col­ored and fla­vored late-sum­mer drink. The species aro­mat­i­ca has leaves that smell like mown grass; pull off a three-part­ed leaf and crush it between your fin­gers to release the aro­ma. The cul­ti­var Gro-Low’ stays 1824” low, but it can widen out to 68’. It works won­der­ful­ly as a ground­cov­er in full sun, part-shade, and deep­er shade. Use it on slopes where the mow­er can’t go or as a tran­si­tion between a for­mal bed and a more wood­land-like setting.

Ilex ver­ti­cil­la­ta (win­ter­ber­ry) is a decid­u­ous hol­ly that drops its small, dark-green leaves in the fall. If pol­li­nat­ed prop­er­ly by sep­a­rate male shrubs, the female shrubs will pro­duce a pletho­ra of yel­low, orange, or, most com­mon­ly, red berries in mid-fall. The vibrant berries will per­sist until late win­ter when food is scarce and the birds flock in to eat the nutri­tious fruit. Many win­ter­ber­ry cul­ti­vars are large, matur­ing at 8 — 10’ tall by 8 — 10’ wide, but the cul­ti­var Lit­tle Gob­lin Red’ stays 34’ tall by 34’ wide. Gar­den­ers must also make room for its male pol­li­na­tor Lit­tle Gob­lin Guy,’ which sim­i­lar­ly matures at 34’ tall by 34’ wide, but does not pro­duce berries. 

Leaves and berries can pro­vide late-sea­son col­or, but to real­ly extend the inter­est in the gar­den, con­sid­er adding shrubs and trees with col­or­ful win­ter bark. Acer palma­tum San­go-kaku’ has leaves that open yel­low with a red edge, turn yel­low-green dur­ing the sum­mer, then return to a love­ly yel­low in the fall. The leaf tran­si­tion is amaz­ing, but the best fea­ture is the tran­si­tion of the bark col­or. It begins red­dish-brown in spring, becomes red­der in the sum­mer, inten­si­fies again in the fall, and final­ly turns bril­liant red in the win­ter, where it stands out strik­ing­ly against the bar­ren, white, snowy land­scape. The cul­ti­var can be chal­leng­ing to find at sup­pli­ers, and the price will reflect that. 

Oth­er plants with late-sea­son col­or: Nys­sa syl­vat­i­ca (tupe­lo), Cepha­lan­thus occi­den­tal­is (but­ton­bush), and Itea vir­gini­ca (Vir­ginia sweetspire).

Click on the pho­tos below for plant identification.

Tap to view full size


Fall 2022

Volume 40 , Number 3

Share this

The Latest from Landis

Oct 07, 2023 | Nolan Marciniec

The Landis community mourns the loss of Anne Donnelly on October 4, 2023

Anne Donnelly was the first of the many friends I’ve made at the Arboretum and... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Fred Breglia, Executive Director

From the Director’s Desk: Update on the Big Tree Search

Landis Arboretum has successfully kicked off its most recent Big Tree Search, and the tree... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Erin McKenna Breglia

From the Garden: Your Autumn Garden Must Haves!

It’s certainly been a rainy summer, but the rain has helped keep our plants green... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Nolan Marciniec

Landis Portraits: A Series About the People Behind the Plants at the Arboretum - Chuck Mueller

Chuck Mueller Volunteering, Chuck Mueller said, “is something you have to believe in . ... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Nolan Marciniec

Volunteers Celebrate Meeting House Renovation

Shawn Bevins, Jim Paley, Craig Blevins, Fred Breglia, and Peter Bakal On a Sunday afternoon... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Sam McClary

Apples and Man: A Book Review

Apples and Man, by Fred Lape “Apples and Man,” written by Arboretum founder Fred Lape... read more

News Archive