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infiniteMPG 12-04-2007 06:20 PM

Tree near House - Identify and Advice????
 
We have a house in west central Florida on a wooded lot with scrub
oaks and southern pines and some other odd trees. A few years ago a
couple feet in front of one corner of the house a small stem of a
plant sprung up. This "tree" had a light color stalk or trunk and
leaves that looked a little like fern leaves. It looked neat so we let
it grow but over the next couple years the trunk grew to about a foot
across and the branches now umbrella over half the house. We like it
because it shades the roof from the hot Florida sun and it is a
beautiful tree.

The issue we have is that one large root that looks like a large
elephant's trunk on the ground, grows along the front of the house and
sinks down near the foundation. We had someone look at the tree and
called it an "air tree" and said there was no worry as it's very soft
wood and would not be able to disrupt the foundation of the house.
We're now trying to identify the tree and gather information to see if
this is true so if it can become a problem we'd rather remove it
before it's too big a problem.

Probably the most identifiable trait is the seed pods. They are big
enough to sit in the palm of your hand, probably about three inches
outside diameter, and maybe a half an inch thick, kind of a ring in
the shape of the letter "C" (like a 1" wide flattened bean pod curved
around into the shape of a "C"). Dark brown in color and hard with
bumps where the seeds exist inside. Very strange looking. Been
searching online and can't find anything on it. I have some pictures
at home but none with me here.

Any help identifying this "plant" (not even sure if it's really a
"tree") would be greatly appreciated. And any advice if having this
so close to the foundation might become an issue would be helpful,
too.

Thanks in advance for your help,
Scott


symplastless 12-04-2007 08:48 PM

Tree near House - Identify and Advice????
 
I do not have the answer. From my experience in Florida when you talk about
those robust woody roots I think of the banyon tree. I do not know what
yours is.


Sincerely,
John A. Keslick, Jr.
Arborist
http://home.ccil.org/~treeman
and www.treedictionary.com
Beware of so-called tree experts who do not understand tree biology.
Storms, fires, floods, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions keep reminding us
that we are not the boss.


If is a woody, shedding, perennial plant usually consisting of one to
several main stems its most likely a tree. The interesting thing is that a
tree really is made up of many annual parts - e.g., leaves, non-woody roots
and so on.



"infiniteMPG" wrote in message
oups.com...
We have a house in west central Florida on a wooded lot with scrub
oaks and southern pines and some other odd trees. A few years ago a
couple feet in front of one corner of the house a small stem of a
plant sprung up. This "tree" had a light color stalk or trunk and
leaves that looked a little like fern leaves. It looked neat so we let
it grow but over the next couple years the trunk grew to about a foot
across and the branches now umbrella over half the house. We like it
because it shades the roof from the hot Florida sun and it is a
beautiful tree.

The issue we have is that one large root that looks like a large
elephant's trunk on the ground, grows along the front of the house and
sinks down near the foundation. We had someone look at the tree and
called it an "air tree" and said there was no worry as it's very soft
wood and would not be able to disrupt the foundation of the house.
We're now trying to identify the tree and gather information to see if
this is true so if it can become a problem we'd rather remove it
before it's too big a problem.

Probably the most identifiable trait is the seed pods. They are big
enough to sit in the palm of your hand, probably about three inches
outside diameter, and maybe a half an inch thick, kind of a ring in
the shape of the letter "C" (like a 1" wide flattened bean pod curved
around into the shape of a "C"). Dark brown in color and hard with
bumps where the seeds exist inside. Very strange looking. Been
searching online and can't find anything on it. I have some pictures
at home but none with me here.

Any help identifying this "plant" (not even sure if it's really a
"tree") would be greatly appreciated. And any advice if having this
so close to the foundation might become an issue would be helpful,
too.

Thanks in advance for your help,
Scott




Cathy Boer 12-04-2007 09:16 PM

Tree near House - Identify and Advice????
 
When you say the tree is fast growing, has fern-like leaves, this reminds me
of a locust tree.


"infiniteMPG" wrote in message
oups.com...
We have a house in west central Florida on a wooded lot with scrub
oaks and southern pines and some other odd trees. A few years ago a
couple feet in front of one corner of the house a small stem of a
plant sprung up. This "tree" had a light color stalk or trunk and
leaves that looked a little like fern leaves. It looked neat so we let
it grow but over the next couple years the trunk grew to about a foot
across and the branches now umbrella over half the house. We like it
because it shades the roof from the hot Florida sun and it is a
beautiful tree.

The issue we have is that one large root that looks like a large
elephant's trunk on the ground, grows along the front of the house and
sinks down near the foundation. We had someone look at the tree and
called it an "air tree" and said there was no worry as it's very soft
wood and would not be able to disrupt the foundation of the house.
We're now trying to identify the tree and gather information to see if
this is true so if it can become a problem we'd rather remove it
before it's too big a problem.

Probably the most identifiable trait is the seed pods. They are big
enough to sit in the palm of your hand, probably about three inches
outside diameter, and maybe a half an inch thick, kind of a ring in
the shape of the letter "C" (like a 1" wide flattened bean pod curved
around into the shape of a "C"). Dark brown in color and hard with
bumps where the seeds exist inside. Very strange looking. Been
searching online and can't find anything on it. I have some pictures
at home but none with me here.

Any help identifying this "plant" (not even sure if it's really a
"tree") would be greatly appreciated. And any advice if having this
so close to the foundation might become an issue would be helpful,
too.

Thanks in advance for your help,
Scott




Jangchub 13-04-2007 02:49 AM

Tree near House - Identify and Advice????
 
And if it has yellow flowers it could be a Palo Verde.

On Thu, 12 Apr 2007 20:16:14 GMT, "Cathy Boer"
wrote:

When you say the tree is fast growing, has fern-like leaves, this reminds me
of a locust tree.


"infiniteMPG" wrote in message
roups.com...
We have a house in west central Florida on a wooded lot with scrub
oaks and southern pines and some other odd trees. A few years ago a
couple feet in front of one corner of the house a small stem of a
plant sprung up. This "tree" had a light color stalk or trunk and
leaves that looked a little like fern leaves. It looked neat so we let
it grow but over the next couple years the trunk grew to about a foot
across and the branches now umbrella over half the house. We like it
because it shades the roof from the hot Florida sun and it is a
beautiful tree.

The issue we have is that one large root that looks like a large
elephant's trunk on the ground, grows along the front of the house and
sinks down near the foundation. We had someone look at the tree and
called it an "air tree" and said there was no worry as it's very soft
wood and would not be able to disrupt the foundation of the house.
We're now trying to identify the tree and gather information to see if
this is true so if it can become a problem we'd rather remove it
before it's too big a problem.

Probably the most identifiable trait is the seed pods. They are big
enough to sit in the palm of your hand, probably about three inches
outside diameter, and maybe a half an inch thick, kind of a ring in
the shape of the letter "C" (like a 1" wide flattened bean pod curved
around into the shape of a "C"). Dark brown in color and hard with
bumps where the seeds exist inside. Very strange looking. Been
searching online and can't find anything on it. I have some pictures
at home but none with me here.

Any help identifying this "plant" (not even sure if it's really a
"tree") would be greatly appreciated. And any advice if having this
so close to the foundation might become an issue would be helpful,
too.

Thanks in advance for your help,
Scott




how 13-04-2007 03:48 AM

Tree near House - Identify and Advice????
 

"infiniteMPG" wrote in message
oups.com...
We have a house in west central Florida on a wooded lot with scrub
oaks and southern pines and some other odd trees. A few years ago a
couple feet in front of one corner of the house a small stem of a
plant sprung up.
snip
We had someone look at the tree and
called it an "air tree" and said there was no worry as it's very soft
wood and would not be able to disrupt the foundation of the house.
We're now trying to identify the tree and gather information to see if
this is true so if it can become a problem we'd rather remove it
before it's too big a problem.
snip


Hi,

You misunderstood he said "Ear tree" Enterolobium cyclocarpum, don't think
I'd want this monster close to my foundation.
HTH -_- how
no NEWS is good



Gloria 13-04-2007 07:03 AM

Tree near House - Identify and Advice????
 
Sounds like a mimosa tree, also called silk tree.

Gloria

infiniteMPG wrote:
We have a house in west central Florida on a wooded lot with scrub
oaks and southern pines and some other odd trees. A few years ago a
couple feet in front of one corner of the house a small stem of a
plant sprung up. This "tree" had a light color stalk or trunk and
leaves that looked a little like fern leaves. It looked neat so we let
it grow but over the next couple years the trunk grew to about a foot
across and the branches now umbrella over half the house. We like it
because it shades the roof from the hot Florida sun and it is a
beautiful tree.

The issue we have is that one large root that looks like a large
elephant's trunk on the ground, grows along the front of the house and
sinks down near the foundation. We had someone look at the tree and
called it an "air tree" and said there was no worry as it's very soft
wood and would not be able to disrupt the foundation of the house.
We're now trying to identify the tree and gather information to see if
this is true so if it can become a problem we'd rather remove it
before it's too big a problem.

Probably the most identifiable trait is the seed pods. They are big
enough to sit in the palm of your hand, probably about three inches
outside diameter, and maybe a half an inch thick, kind of a ring in
the shape of the letter "C" (like a 1" wide flattened bean pod curved
around into the shape of a "C"). Dark brown in color and hard with
bumps where the seeds exist inside. Very strange looking. Been
searching online and can't find anything on it. I have some pictures
at home but none with me here.

Any help identifying this "plant" (not even sure if it's really a
"tree") would be greatly appreciated. And any advice if having this
so close to the foundation might become an issue would be helpful,
too.

Thanks in advance for your help,
Scott


Gloria 13-04-2007 07:11 AM

Tree near House - Identify and Advice????
 
ear tree:

http://www.greendealer-exotic-seeds....casteTree.html

infiniteMPG wrote:
We have a house in west central Florida on a wooded lot with scrub
oaks and southern pines and some other odd trees. A few years ago a
couple feet in front of one corner of the house a small stem of a
plant sprung up. This "tree" had a light color stalk or trunk and
leaves that looked a little like fern leaves. It looked neat so we let
it grow but over the next couple years the trunk grew to about a foot
across and the branches now umbrella over half the house. We like it
because it shades the roof from the hot Florida sun and it is a
beautiful tree.

The issue we have is that one large root that looks like a large
elephant's trunk on the ground, grows along the front of the house and
sinks down near the foundation. We had someone look at the tree and
called it an "air tree" and said there was no worry as it's very soft
wood and would not be able to disrupt the foundation of the house.
We're now trying to identify the tree and gather information to see if
this is true so if it can become a problem we'd rather remove it
before it's too big a problem.

Probably the most identifiable trait is the seed pods. They are big
enough to sit in the palm of your hand, probably about three inches
outside diameter, and maybe a half an inch thick, kind of a ring in
the shape of the letter "C" (like a 1" wide flattened bean pod curved
around into the shape of a "C"). Dark brown in color and hard with
bumps where the seeds exist inside. Very strange looking. Been
searching online and can't find anything on it. I have some pictures
at home but none with me here.

Any help identifying this "plant" (not even sure if it's really a
"tree") would be greatly appreciated. And any advice if having this
so close to the foundation might become an issue would be helpful,
too.

Thanks in advance for your help,
Scott


FragileWarrior 13-04-2007 01:55 PM

Tree near House - Identify and Advice????
 
Gloria wrote in news:%9FTh.23105$G23.7306
@newsreading01.news.tds.net:

ear tree:

http://www.greendealer-exotic-seeds....casteTree.html


COOL seed pods. I'd love to get my hands on some of those!


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