espringer

Showing all posts tagged bark:

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seen...

How hard it is to suspend the neural impulse to meet this gaze and interpret it! Of course, the tree may be watching me in other ways, but this spot is not more sensitive than any other part of the...

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American Elm

A few elms grow adjacent to Big Falls… Their bark is corky, complex, and always pale and patchy in color. The adventitious buds, off to the sides of this large trunk, suggest that this elm may not...

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Black walnut

Walnuts and hickories are closely related, and I'm not yet sure I can reliably tell the bark apart. But on the east side of Laurel Brook Rd, there are black walnuts on the ground, and the bark of t...

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Silver maple

Distinguishing silver maple (acer saccharinum, note very small difference in name from acer saccharum, sugar maple) from red maple is difficult, at least before the leaves and fruit emerge. (The le...

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Black oak

I poked around among the leaf litter until I confirmed that there was indeed a typical black oak leaf to associate with this tree. Black oak is outnumbered here by red oak, but their profile from a...

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pignut hickory

The pignut bark may look almost shiny when young -- the outer layer has a bit of a sheen, and is only a bit broken up by vertical lines of strain. New bark layers seem to build up under the protect...

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