Plant Image Data Base
Crataegus
phaenopyrum
Washington Hawthorn
(Rosaceae - Rose Family)
Form
- small ornamental tree
- maturing at about 20' tall by 20' wide
- upright oval growth habit in youth, quickly becoming spreading rounded to
arching mounded with age; often multi-trunked, densely branched, and twiggy
with numerous thorns
- slow to medium growth rate
Culture
- full sun to partial sun
- prefers moist, well-drained soils in full sun, but is tolerant of poor
soils, various soil pHs, compacted soils, drought, heat, and Winter salt
spray
- propagated by seeds and rooted cuttings
- Rose Family, with several diseases and pests, most notably various rusts
that affect the stems, foliage, and fruit (especially the extremely common
cedar hawthorn rust and cedar quince rust, which will lead to a steady
decline in tree vigor as they re-occur year after year)
- abundantly available in clump (multi-trunk) or tree (single trunk) forms,
primarily in ball and burlap form
- Washington Hawthorn is somewhat sensitive to being transplanted in Autumn,
and care should be taken to amend the soil, fertilize, water thoroughly,
mulch adequately, and avoid Winter salt spray, to enhance survival chances
during the first Winter
Foliage
- emerging reddish, but quickly maturing to dark green and shiny on the
upper leaf surface, while dull medium green on the lower leaf surface
- alternate, broadly ovate, about 2" long, with three major lobes, with
the terminal lobe being much larger than the basal two lobes
- doubly serrated to incised on the margins, with cordate bases
- fall color is burgundy to wine, occurring in late October and into mid
November, and subtlety attractive
Flowers
- white inflorescences (about 2" wide) blanket the tree in early June
(it is the last of the landscape Hawthorns to flower), effective for two
weeks and extremely malodorous
Fruits
- 0.25" diameter green fruits are in pendulous clusters, turning to
orange by October then to bright red-orange in November, and often
persisting into late January (if not eaten by wildlife before then)
- clusters of many pendulous small red fruits make this one of the most
attractive ornamental trees in early Winter, with its limbs being blanketed
and weighted down in fruits and easily seen from a distance in December and
January
- fruits are readily eaten by birds and squirrels
- infections of various rusts create white-orange protuberances on the green
fruits in Summer (especially following wet Springs), usually causing these
infected fruits to abscise before Autumn
Twigs
- thin twigs with small buds are red-brown and somewhat zigzag, changing to
reddish-gray on the stems and branches
- the thorniness of the twigs shows great variation within the species, from
lightly thorny to densely thorny; in either case, this tree is a literal
pain to prune and handle, as its sharp thorns eventually penetrate gloved
hands and shirted forearms
- very twiggy in appearance, and shedding small twigs continuously from
self-shading in the interior of the dense canopy
Trunk
- usually either multi-trunked or single-trunked and branching low, but
sometimes single-trunked and limbed up into classic tree form
- bark exfoliates into thin strips to reveal a red-orange interior bark
beneath a brown-gray exterior bark
- branches, although composed of dense and strong wood, are sometimes prone
to storm damage with age, a combination of the heavy fruit loads in
Autumn/Winter (or ice loads that may occasionally accumulate on the thin but
numerous twigs) and narrow crotch angles at some (not all) of the major
branch junctures
ID Summary
- leaves emerge bronze but quickly transition to dark green, and have three
serrated and incised lobes, with the central lobe being prominently larger
than the basal pair
- white inflorescences are the last and smelliest of the landscape Hawthorns
to flower, in early June, pungently malodorous and effective for two weeks
of nasal torture
- clusters of pendulous green fruits in Summer (which often have pink-orange
projections of rust growing on them, especially in the Spring was wet)
change to orange-red fruits by mid-Autumn, then to heavy red-orange fruits
in late Autumn and early Winter, when they abscise or are consumed by
wildlife
- trunk(s) has bark that exfoliates in thin linear strips, exposing a
red-orange interior bark
Function
- specimen, focal point, foundation, entranceway, border, street, group
planting, or multi-season accent tree
Texture
- medium-fine texture in foliage and fine texture when bare
- thick density in foliage and when bare
Assets
- four-season ornamental tree
- showy late Spring white inflorescences
- showy Autumn red fruits and burgundy fall color
- showy early Winter fruits and bark/twigginess/texture
- urban tolerant
- wildlife attraction and refuge
- Winter salt spray tolerant
Liabilities
- severe rust diseases (including cedar hawthorn rust and cedar quince rust)
may infect the fruits, leaves, and stems, and often re-occur from year to
year once established
- malodorous inflorescences in late Spring
- thorns on lower branches that are at pedestrian level are a potential
injury liability
- rarely prone to trunk splitting or branch shearing with wind or ice, in
instances when branch-to-trunk crotch angles are very narrow
Habitat
- zones 3 to 8 (but performs better in the northern half of its range)
- native to the Southern United States
Variants
- clump (multi-trunked) and tree (single-trunked) forms of the straight
species are commonly available
- Crataegus x 'Vaughnii' - Vaughn Hawthorn - a hybrid between
Cockspur Hawthorn (Crataegus crus-galli) and Washington Hawthorn (Crataegus
phaenopyrum), more upright and less thorny than either of its parents,
with abundant fruits of intermediate size, but of low commercial
availability, noted for its salt spray tolerance, and effectively used as a
street median or island parking lot tree in addition to the other functions
noted above
Purpose
- Washington Hawthorn is a four-season ornamental tree, becoming an accent
tree in early Winter with its persistent red fruits.
Summary
- Crataegus phaenopyrum is a highly ornamental small tree of rounded
to semi-pendulous habit at maturity, with showy but malodorous late Spring
inflorescences, dark green Summer foliage, burgundy late Autumn fall color,
late Autumn and early Winter red fruits, fine texture, lightly exfoliating
bark, and dense twigginess, that also attracts wildlife and often has rust
as a severe disease problem with age.
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