Is it a shrub, is it a tree, no it's …
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Postbut the Woodland Trust guy said he had a pollarded maple in his garden which he'd kept to a reasonable size. And I topped one of the hawthorns so that it has a drooping umbrella shape.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostInteresting, but I'm not sure that I want to follow the bonsai routebut the Woodland Trust guy said he had a pollarded maple in his garden which he'd kept to a reasonable size. And I topped one of the hawthorns so that it has a drooping umbrella shape.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostAny update on this?
I am expecting a bumper crop of birch seedlings in both my plant pots and the garden proper as the quantity of seed produced in 2018 was exceptional. It got every where, blowing into the house through windows and doors, getting into clothes drying on the line, turning up as garnish on food.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostAny update on this?Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI was wondering as well, but it's too early I think for any foliage, although I suppose that if it was something tender(I don't believe it is) it would be showing signs of having succumbed to the winter.
I am expecting a bumper crop of birch seedlings in both my plant pots and the garden proper as the quantity of seed produced in 2018 was exceptional. It got every where, blowing into the house through windows and doors, getting into clothes drying on the line, turning up as garnish on food.
No, no foliage as yet, but planted out and just a hint of green on the buds. A neighbour down the road has a pot in front of the house with something very similar. I must ask if they know what it is. Did I say the Woodland Trust "guessed" [sic] Downy Birch?
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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So, so sad to hear on the lunchtime news that the ash dieback disease, thought to be a consequence of higher temperatures, is spreading faster than was first thought. This will have a devastating effect on our landscapes, whether or not new more resistant varieties can be produced, as well as the associated animal species.
Apologies of this is in the wrong thread.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
No, no foliage as yet, but planted out and just a hint of green on the buds. A neighbour down the road has a pot in front of the house with something very similar. I must ask if they know what it is. Did I say the Woodland Trust "guessed" [sic] Downy Birch?
Serial_Apologist
I missed the news. Is it as bad as that?
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View Post
Serial_Apologist
I missed the news. Is it as bad as that?
BTW Frenchie's "tree" is not an ash - where it to be so the buds would be twinned along both sides of the stems.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostAt least we now know it’s a tree.
BTW Frenchie's "tree" is not an ash - where it to be so the buds would be twinned along both sides of the stems.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Anyone seen a mistletoe tree before?
For 35 of the 40 years we've lived here, it's been a smalll apple-tree full of delicious small red eating apples in late summer. Mrs A. had an ambition to get mistletoe to grow on it...which failed for 35 years...and then...boom.
(The birds have stripped all the berries, BTW.) Whether the tree will survive or not remains to be seen. In addition to the obvious bits, there are tiny mistletoe 'shoots' popping up all over it. I assumed a parasite would not kill its host, but in this case it seems likely. Devon is not particularly known for mistletoe, whereas Somerset, not far away, is.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostAnyone seen a mistletoe tree before?
For 35 of the 40 years we've lived here, it's been a smalll apple-tree full of delicious small red eating apples in late summer. Mrs A. had an ambition to get mistletoe to grow on it...which failed for 35 years...and then...boom.
(The birds have stripped all the berries, BTW.) Whether the tree will survive or not remains to be seen. In addition to the obvious bits, there are tiny mistletoe 'shoots' popping up all over it. I assumed a parasite would not kill its host, but in this case it seems likely. Devon is not particularly known for mistletoe, whereas Somerset, not far away, is.
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