If you own timberland, you have soft maple- er, red maple- er, pi$$ maple-
All right, you have acer rubrum. It's probably the most common maple in the state, and grows well on the finest sites as well as poor quality cedar ground.
There is also striped maple, aka moose maple with the big leaves; and mountain maple which isn't limited to mountains. Both of these are early successional and don't get very big.
Norway maple is an immigrant; a lot of these have been planted since post WW II because they grow fast and are great shade trees. The leaves are similar to a sugar maple except they're bigger; the twigs are clublike, similar to a red maple.
I call them an invasive species because their offspring is everywhere. They really aren't though.
All right, you have acer rubrum. It's probably the most common maple in the state, and grows well on the finest sites as well as poor quality cedar ground.
There is also striped maple, aka moose maple with the big leaves; and mountain maple which isn't limited to mountains. Both of these are early successional and don't get very big.
Norway maple is an immigrant; a lot of these have been planted since post WW II because they grow fast and are great shade trees. The leaves are similar to a sugar maple except they're bigger; the twigs are clublike, similar to a red maple.
I call them an invasive species because their offspring is everywhere. They really aren't though.