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A beautiful tree Gwerd, one that is popular here. I read somewhere that the fruit on the female tree have a horrid smell but I didn't notice this on trees last year at christchurch Botanic Garden, and covered with fruit.
Cohan,the nuts are considered a delicacy in China, where they are roasted after cleaning. I've never had the oportunity to try them.jamie
Gerd / Cohan / LesleyThere a a few very old Ginkgos in Halifax but I have never seen flowers on them. Maybe we're too summer cool. I not so fondly recall going to Maymount Park in Richmond, Virginia to collect seeds in the 70's We had baskets and would collect for a few minutes then one of us would invariably have to run off and gag for awhile and then return to collect again. The female trees were indiscrimantely planted as street trees in the eastern USA back in the early 1900's and there are famous shots of all the females being sawed down overnight by local residents, I think one in Donald Wyman's book. The smell like large dog droppings and yet the nuts are indeed quite tasty.In old age the tree sends down aerial roots, scroll down.johnw
A beautiful tree Gerd, one that is popular here. I read somewhere that the fruit on the female tree have a horrid smell but I didn't notice this on trees last year at christchurch Botanic Garden, and covered with fruit.
The horrid smell of the fruits can only be recognized when the fall to the ground, late in autumn to early winter. The smell like rancid butter.Here in Germany (but I think, the same in other countries) the gardeners graft a female branch in the male trees.
Quote from: Lesley Cox on November 01, 2009, 08:18:17 PMA beautiful tree Gerd, one that is popular here. I read somewhere that the fruit on the female tree have a horrid smell but I didn't notice this on trees last year at christchurch Botanic Garden, and covered with fruit.The horrid smell of the fruits can only be recognized when the fall to the ground, late in autumn to early winter. The smell like rancid butter.Here in Germany (but I think, the same in other countries) the gardeners graft a female branch in the male trees.