Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
2 trees ID
Hoping for ID on these two...
http://i42.tinypic.com/34nldzs.jpg http://i41.tinypic.com/33ab1i9.jpg The first looks like ash, but the leaves are wrong. The 2nd I havent a clue what it is. I plucked some of the flowery processes off to peek inside, as is shown. The pic was taken a day after picking, and the light green fruity thing in the centre is going brown in the pic. fingers crossed, NT |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
2 trees ID
"NT" wrote in message ... Hoping for ID on these two... http://i42.tinypic.com/34nldzs.jpg http://i41.tinypic.com/33ab1i9.jpg The first looks like ash, but the leaves are wrong. The 2nd I havent a clue what it is. I plucked some of the flowery processes off to peek inside, as is shown. The pic was taken a day after picking, and the light green fruity thing in the centre is going brown in the pic. fingers crossed, NT The first is an Acer. Can not tell which speices from the single leaf shown. The second is the fruit of Plane (Platanus x acerifolia is most common species) R. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
2 trees ID
In message , Ragnar
writes "NT" wrote in message ... Hoping for ID on these two... http://i42.tinypic.com/34nldzs.jpg http://i41.tinypic.com/33ab1i9.jpg The first looks like ash, but the leaves are wrong. The 2nd I havent a clue what it is. I plucked some of the flowery processes off to peek inside, as is shown. The pic was taken a day after picking, and the light green fruity thing in the centre is going brown in the pic. fingers crossed, NT The first is an Acer. Can not tell which speices from the single leaf shown. The second is the fruit of Plane (Platanus x acerifolia is most common species) R. You beat me to it. The original poster should note that the samaras (keys) of maples (Acer) are in pairs, rather single as in ashes (Fraxinus). -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
2 trees ID
On Nov 9, 1:49*pm, Stewart Robert Hinsley
wrote: In message , Ragnar writes "NT" wrote in message .... Hoping for ID on these two... http://i42.tinypic.com/34nldzs.jpg http://i41.tinypic.com/33ab1i9.jpg The first looks like ash, but the leaves are wrong. The 2nd I havent a clue what it is. I plucked some of the flowery processes off to peek inside, as is shown. The pic was taken a day after picking, and the light green fruity thing in the centre is going brown in the pic. fingers crossed, NT The first is an Acer. Can not tell which speices from the single leaf shown. The second is the fruit of Plane (Platanus x acerifolia is most common species) R. You beat me to it. The original poster should note that the samaras (keys) of maples (Acer) are in pairs, rather single as in ashes (Fraxinus). -- Stewart Robert Hinsley- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I know its a Maple, but think Sycamore for 1 |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
2 trees ID
On 09/11/2011 14:53, Dave Hill wrote:
On Nov 9, 1:49 pm, Stewart Robert wrote: In , Ragnar writes wrote in message ... Hoping for ID on these two... http://i42.tinypic.com/34nldzs.jpg http://i41.tinypic.com/33ab1i9.jpg The first looks like ash, but the leaves are wrong. The 2nd I havent a clue what it is. I plucked some of the flowery processes off to peek inside, as is shown. The pic was taken a day after picking, and the light green fruity thing in the centre is going brown in the pic. fingers crossed, NT The first is an Acer. Can not tell which speices from the single leaf shown. The second is the fruit of Plane (Platanus x acerifolia is most common species) R. You beat me to it. The original poster should note that the samaras (keys) of maples (Acer) are in pairs, rather single as in ashes (Fraxinus). -- Stewart Robert Hinsley- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I know its a Maple, but think Sycamore for 1 I think No.1 is a Sycamore. It may be worth noting that the black spot on the leaf is Acer Tar Spot. Not much you can do about it, except keep it away from decorative acers if you grow any. -- Spider from high ground in SE London gardening on clay |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
2 trees ID
On 11/09/2011 05:22 PM, Spider wrote:
On 09/11/2011 14:53, Dave Hill wrote: On Nov 9, 1:49 pm, Stewart Robert wrote: In , Ragnar writes wrote in message ... Hoping for ID on these two... http://i42.tinypic.com/34nldzs.jpg http://i41.tinypic.com/33ab1i9.jpg The first looks like ash, but the leaves are wrong. The 2nd I havent a clue what it is. I plucked some of the flowery processes off to peek inside, as is shown. The pic was taken a day after picking, and the light green fruity thing in the centre is going brown in the pic. fingers crossed, NT The first is an Acer. Can not tell which speices from the single leaf shown. The second is the fruit of Plane (Platanus x acerifolia is most common species) R. You beat me to it. The original poster should note that the samaras (keys) of maples (Acer) are in pairs, rather single as in ashes (Fraxinus). -- Stewart Robert Hinsley- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I know its a Maple, but think Sycamore for 1 I think No.1 is a Sycamore. It may be worth noting that the black spot on the leaf is Acer Tar Spot. Not much you can do about it, except keep it away from decorative acers if you grow any. Does not look like a sycamore (A. pseudoplatanus) although as Ragnar says it is difficult to tell from one leaf. Samara looks wrong too. The 3 lobes could indicate A. rubrum, which has wide morphological variation, or perhaps a form of A. opalus. More leaves will help! -E |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
2 trees ID
On Nov 9, 1:15*pm, NT wrote:
Hoping for ID on these two...http://i42.tinypic.com/34nldzs.jpght...om/33ab1i9.jpg The first looks like ash, but the leaves are wrong. The 2nd I havent a clue what it is. I plucked some of the flowery processes off to peek inside, as is shown. The pic was taken a day after picking, and the light green fruity thing in the centre is going brown in the pic. fingers crossed, NT Thanks everyone. Looks like its some sort of maple, I'll get a better picture at some point. cheers, NT |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Eucalyptus Trees: Leaves turn yellow and trees die. | Gardening | |||
Cicada wasps, apricot trees, cherry trees | Plant Science | |||
Pruning apple trees (was: question about seeding fruit trees) | Edible Gardening | |||
Orange Trees and Lemon Trees | Australia | |||
Orange Trees and Lemon Trees | Edible Gardening |