SKU: 79829206405
planting an acer in a pot

planting an acer in a pot Acer palmatum 'Going Green' | Outdoor Plant

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Description

planting an acer in a pot Acer palmatum 'Going Green' | Outdoor PlantAcer palmatum 'Going Green' is a green leaved Japanese maple selected for luminous stems and a clean, rounded canopy. Fresh spring growth opens lime green, settles into bright summer green, then shifts into orange and red tones in autumn. When leaves fall, green bark and smooth branching keep the outline lively through winter, especially once the lower crown is gently lifted to show the stems. In open ground, this cultivar matures into a substantial

Acer palmatum 'Going Green' is a green-leaved Japanese maple selected for luminous stems and a clean, rounded canopy. Fresh spring growth opens lime-green, settles into bright summer green, then shifts into orange and red tones in autumn. When leaves fall, green bark and smooth branching keep the outline lively through winter, especially once the lower crown is gently lifted to show the stems.

In open ground, this cultivar matures into a substantial small tree, ultimately reaching 4-8 m tall with a 2.5-4 m spread. Planted in a container, growth runs slower and the plant stays more compact than in open ground, which makes it workable for patios and courtyards when the pot is generous and watering is consistent.

Green stems that carry the season

Stem colour is a defining feature of Acer palmatum 'Going Green'. Young stems glow green and stay clean-looking as the plant ages, creating a bright framework behind the leaves in summer and a clear silhouette after leaf-fall. Leaves are typically seven-lobed with long, pointed segments, giving a crisp texture that reads clearly both up close and across the garden.

Light and exposure

Sun to part shade suits Acer palmatum 'Going Green'. A sheltered position improves foliage quality, especially in sites with dry wind or strong midday heat. Part shade often keeps the canopy looking fresh through summer, while sun can work well where soil moisture stays reliable. If a site is exposed, plants respond best when placed where a wall, hedge, or larger shrubs break the wind.

  • Best placement: sheltered border, lawn specimen, or woodland-edge style planting
  • Sunlight: sun to part shade
  • Exposure: sheltered, protected from drying winds

Soil, drainage, and moisture balance

This cultivar grows well in moisture-retentive, well-drained soils. Clay, loam, and sand can all work, provided drainage is steady and the root zone keeps some moisture between waterings. A layer of organic mulch helps buffer summer drying, supports fine root growth near the surface, and keeps soil temperatures more even.

Soil reaction can be acid, neutral, or alkaline. In alkaline ground, organic matter additions and a consistent mulch layer help keep root conditions stable and support nutrient availability. On heavier clay, planting on a slight mound and mixing in coarse organic material can improve structure and drainage while still holding moisture.

Planting for a strong start

Autumn or spring planting gives Acer palmatum 'Going Green' time to root into surrounding soil before summer heat. Set the plant so the top of the root ball sits level with the surrounding ground, then water thoroughly to settle soil around the roots. A wide mulch ring helps reduce competition from grass and keeps the root zone more even in moisture and temperature.

  • First season watering: deep watering during dry spells until new growth feels steady
  • Mulch: 5-8 cm of composted bark or leaf mould, kept clear of the trunk
  • Staking: only when the site is windy or the plant has a tall, top-heavy framework

Ongoing care through the year

Japanese maples respond best to steady conditions. In most gardens, a spring top-dress of compost and an annual mulch refresh are enough. Feeding can stay light; vigorous fertilising tends to push soft growth that marks more easily in wind and heat. During prolonged dry spells, deep watering supports the canopy and helps keep leaf edges clean.

Fallen leaves can be left in place as a light woodland mulch in planting beds, or cleared and composted for future mulch. In lawns, a clear mulch ring around the trunk reduces mowing damage and keeps moisture more reliable around shallow surface roots.

Pruning and shaping

Acer palmatum 'Going Green' naturally forms a rounded, bushy crown and rarely needs routine pruning. Where shaping is useful, work in dormancy (late autumn through winter) and focus on structure: remove damaged wood, thin crossing branches, and refine the outline with small cuts. If a multi-stem form is preferred, select and keep several strong stems and remove weak competing shoots over time. For a small-tree look, lift the canopy gradually by removing a few lower branches over several seasons.

Container growing that lasts

Large containers suit Acer palmatum 'Going Green' well, especially on patios where stem colour can be enjoyed at close range. Use a pot with generous drainage holes and a stable, moisture-retentive mix that still drains freely. A loam-based compost with added pine bark and a mineral component (pumice or grit) helps keep structure over time.

  • Pot size: start roomy; a wider pot supports stability and moisture buffering
  • Watering: check frequently in warm weather; water deeply until excess drains
  • Repotting: refresh the mix every few years; light root pruning keeps plants vigorous when pot size stays the same
  • Winter: insulate the container or move it to a sheltered corner, as roots in pots experience colder swings

Typical issues and how they show up

Leaf scorch can appear in hot, dry weather, especially when wind combines with strong sun and the root zone dries quickly. Consistent moisture, shelter, and a mulch layer usually keep foliage looking its best. In heavier soils that stay wet for long periods in winter, root stress can develop; improved soil structure, raised planting, and reliable drainage support long-term health.

Aphids and other sap-feeding insects can appear on soft spring growth. Natural predators often keep populations in check. Good air movement through the crown helps reduce leaf-spot problems in humid summers, while steady watering reduces stress that can make plants more vulnerable.

Design notes

Acer palmatum 'Going Green' works well as a specimen where stem colour and branch structure can be appreciated. Underplant with shade-tolerant perennials and spring bulbs, or pair with fine grasses and ferns for a layered, woodland feel. In winter, the green framework stands out against darker evergreens and stone, keeping the garden interesting beyond the leaf season.

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ciera haynes-brodowski
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 4
emotional. heart warming
Format: Kindle
It was a good book, the relationships with the friends a main part of it. I do wish there was more spice because she slow burned us to death and then gave us this a closed door. Lol But it was well written and poignant.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 22, 2025
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Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 5
I am begging you to read this book
Format: Kindle, Format: Kindle
A group of women trapped in a temple during an invasion who pretend to be sacred priestesses to avoid being killed and it actually works. That is the setup. That is the whole brilliant premise behind the title and honestly it had me from the first chapter. But what keeps you reading is Edie. She is not a chosen one, not a warrior, not a princess. She is older, she has already lived a full complicated life before this story starts, and that history shapes every decision she makes. When everything falls apart and she ends up somewhere she never expected to be, she does not transform overnight. She reads the room, adjusts, and keeps going. It sounds simple but it is so refreshing compared to what fantasy usually gives us. The women around her are just as important. They do not instantly become a perfect found family. They figure each other out slowly, earn each other's trust over time, and what builds between them ended up being one of my favorite things about this entire book. The romance is slow burn done right. Not manufactured tension, not two people being stubborn for no reason. Real yearning, real patience, real payoff. The magic and world building are present without being overwhelming. There is a nature and ritual element running through everything that gives the story a distinct feel without stopping to explain itself every five minutes. The final stretch of this book is something I was not prepared for. By that point you are so invested in these characters that everything carries weight it would not have had on page one. If you want wall to wall action this is not your book. If you want fantasy that actually makes you feel something, this is exactly your book. One of my favorite reads in a long time. When I was finished reading it, I just kinda sat there... trying to savor every moment of it. Five stars. I recommend this to everyone I know.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2026
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Roya Tavako-lion
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
BLEW ME AWAY! Loved every moment
Format: Kindle, Format: Kindle
My new FAVORITE BOOK! Priestess by Kara Reynolds blew me away from start to finish. This is a beautiful story about feminine power, sacrifice, self-worth, friendship, found family, healing and love. And the SLOW burn romance is excruciating and exquisite in the best way (“I am beyond temptation, I have been tempted and I have surrendered”). It was especially wonderful to find a fantasy novel with an FMC in her late 30s that is very relatable. It explores the topics of finding love later in life, fertility and the struggles women have with attaching self-worth with motherhood (My mother says all women are mothers in different ways, that we all give birth, just not all to children. Some women give birth to revolutions, to movements, to sanctuary, to art, to brilliance.”) GAHHH love this. I felt so seen. The twists and turns had me on the edge of my seat, dying to turn the pages faster to know what happens and at the same time wanting to slow down and enjoy Reynolds beautiful prose and savor each chapter. The ending was perfect and the authors note made me cry. I CANNOT wait to read Illuminator and Pilgrimess which will be out April 28th!!!! Kara Reynolds is def on my auto-buy list 💚
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Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2026
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M Chi
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
Take a jaunt to Tintar, a city of blue abalones and black stone set above the angry sea...
Format: Paperback
Edie is a clever, gutsy heroine, who is lucky to be surrounded by a crew of likewise interesting ladies. Their tender moments in the bath and at the bar alike were very lovely, and the themes of female friendship were refreshing. My favorite parts had to do with the magic of this world, which is very novel. Often there's elemental magic, earth gets the short end of the stick. Not so here. The power of earth in this seaside landscape cannot be underestimated, and I really enjoyed that twist. Earth signs, at least, will rejoice in seeing their element treated with real consideration. All of the scenes of magic and old gods were A+, and I loved the weirdness of the rocks first coming to her in the forest, then erupting from the ground to let her know without a doubt what her strength was, and finally forming majestic creatures to rescue her new home—all based on the women who had supported and loved her. The final conflict was excellent. There was a real sense that Edie was going to sacrifice something that she did not want to let go of, which you don't get that often. (Plus, it was pretty funny when a certain someone got tossed over a wall.) Finally, given the themes of womanhood in this book, I am going to pull a word from the big reviewers' lexicon and say that this book is /timely/. What it says about what women are and are not, how it explores Edie's feelings about her body, were thoughtful and illuminating and, yes, timely and given the political climate we are now in—I will even add /necessary/ to that list. It's a rich, femme-centric fantasy epic that made me think about womanhood (and motherhood) in a new light.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 26, 2024
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katienich27
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
Woman's experience and the power of female friendships
Format: Kindle
This story was amazing, and had several elements currently lacking from the genre. It was mature, wise, experienced, and empathetic. It was wonderfully representative of women's experience, with the bonds and friendships between them serving as the balm for life's hurts. **Spoiler alert/warning: Reynolds tackled SA, infertility, teenage pregnancy, and more. Her representation of infertility is the most true-to-form capture of that awful journey that I've ever seen in literature (AND it wasn't "cured" by the love of the "right" man - something that drives me crazy in 99.99999% of stories that try to touch on infertility). She even included the realness of the older infertile woman's response to the teenage pregnancy in a raw and unfiltered way. Another review said it but I'll back it up: Kara knows. And she shows you that she knows. Thank you for your empathetic writing, Kara Reynolds. Thank you for seeing women and our experiences and representing us on the page. I was touched, moved, inspired, and comforted by the power of female friendships and found family. The romance was gorgeous, even in its predictability. Because it was clear that the true loves of her life were those enduring women who walked life alongside her. Amazing story.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2025

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