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Acer griseum continues to please me year round; I planted a tree next to my old deck about 18 years ago. I chose Acer griseum to be planted near my deck because of its very slow growth (so that it wouldn't overtake the deck), yet after some years finally provide some shade, for its fine small scale foliage in spring and summer, glorious fall color, and the beautiful peeling bark and picturesque twiggy branching in winter.
Luit, Zanthoxylum simulans looks very interesting, the trunk looks more "bumpy" than dangerously thorny, but a rather distinctive tree.
Luit,see the other pictures of Hillier in the General Forum, reminds me to visit these place again. Thanks for the pictures of this wonderful place.
Quote from: Onion on November 13, 2010, 09:46:38 PMLuit,see the other pictures of Hillier in the General Forum, reminds me to visit these place again. Thanks for the pictures of this wonderful place.Uli if you were my guide there, I would have seen many more interesting trees than we did. It's an enormous park and we did not know where to look first, so we just had a glimp of so many trees in some hours time.Also very exclusive looking was this Styphnolobium japonicum Pendulum.
I have been reading "Trees" by Hugh Johnson this evening ...
I hate this renaming, newnaming etc. of all the old plants.
I just remembered that I saw a shrub at Forde Abbey without a name as well and I think I should know what it is, but the brains .... I do know that it is not a Colutea, but what is it then? Maybe someone can tell me what it is ??
Regarding the Sophora... ahem, Styphnolobium, is it just the pendulous form that doesn't flower? There are large trees of this locally that always flower, but they're not the pendulous form.