Holm Oak (Quercus Ilex)

Holm Oak (Quercus Ilex)
Holm Oak (Quercus Ilex)
Showing posts with label tree photos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tree photos. Show all posts

Monday, October 13, 2014

Gingko biloba and planting in Century Park Plaza, Roanoke, Virginia

One of my favorite places in downtown Roanoke, VA is the Century Park Plaza between Kirk and Church Streets.  It is planted with columnar ginkgo trees - both male and female -  with wisteria draped over trellises that hide the sides of neighboring buildings.

The Plaza is also home to seven sculptured columns decorated and colored to symbolize the cultures represented by Roanoke's sister cities.  The columns are tucked in among the gingko trees.  Mimi Babe Harris and Donna Essig created the sculptures.  The columns were dedicated in 2004 and are part of Roanoke City's public art collection. 

Entrance to the PLaza from Kirk Avenue 


Entrance from Kirk Avenue  through metal arches


Entrance from Kirk Avenue up brick steps, bypassing

 small fountain heads and through metal arch


Fountains consisting of small heads or jets, metal arches made of metal,

 and containers of summer annuals (coleus) made a great introduction to the 

light green leaves of Ginkgo biloba 

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Kudzu (probably Pueraria lobata) is at the height of its flowering cycle


#treetuesday introduces what is probably one of the most invasive species ever introduced into the Unites States  First introduced as a flowering ornamental at the Philadelphia Continental Exposition in 1876. In the 1930s and '40s, the government rebranded kudzu as a remedy for soil erosion and as cattle feed. 

 In the southern U.S. kudzu is reportedly used to make soapslotions, contribute to compost, and the fiber used to make baskets. 

***All of these photos taken near a street where I live in southwest VA where it rambles over abandoned trees and even over an invasive bamboo.





 

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Aralia spinosa: The Devil's Walking Stick, a dangerous but colorful North American native


The thorns arising from the woody trunks and stems 

give this small tree its name.

Aralia spinosa, aka The Devil's Walking Stick or Hercules Club, is our #treetuesday woody plant of the week.  In the ginseng (Aralia) family it is native to eastern North America. It's been many years since I've seen a stand of them, but found these in a much cutover slope near Charlottesville, Va. 


Small white flowers develop into these showy maroon berries

 in the autumn 

The tri-pinnately compound leaves are another distinguishing 

characteristic of this handsome but straggly tree.




Monday, September 8, 2014

Ginkgo biloba: an ancient and beautiful tree

#tree tuesday

Ginkgo biloba, commonly called the gingko  or the maidenhair tree, is an ancient and unique species with no living relatives. Often called a living fossil, the gingko is similar to fossils dating back 270 million years. It is native to China, was introduced early to human history and cultivation. It has various uses in traditional medicine, and its fruit is a source of food in Asian cooking.  The gingko, preferably the male of this dioecious species, makes a handsome and adaptable urban ornamental.






Monday, September 1, 2014

Autumn Leaves

#Tree Tuesday


First Day of Autumn

In 2014, the autumnal equinox brings the fall season to the Northern Hemisphere on: September 22 at 10:29 P.M. EDT. The days are getting shorter in the Northern Hemisphere. Day and night are approximately equal in length. 


Sun peeking through hickory tree leaves around noon.

 

Gathering up oak and hickory tree leaves using a gasoline-powered blower. 




Monday, April 14, 2014

Spring Color, Form and Texture Add to Landscape

Spruce, Weeping Willow, Cherries and Bradford Pear

 with a Freshwater Pond in Background

 Contribute to a Serene View


English Ivy and Assorted Evergreen Shrubs 

Provide a Multihued Backdrop.

 A bed of white daffodils with a single yellow one and a pink crabapple in bud draw viewers into this landscape.  Local natural boulders provide comfortable seating placed throughout a singular connected path constructed of earth-toned pea gravel.