Camperdown elm (Ulmus glabra 'Camperdown')
22 January 2006, Rt. 28, Avon
This dwarf weeping elm with picturesque
branches has become a rarity, wiped out by Dutch elm disease. In the US
chances to find it are somewhat better than in Europe.
Camperdown elm (Ulmus glabra 'Camperdown')
22 January 2006, Rt. 28, Avon
While these photos were taken, construction was going on in close proximity.
The unique tree was soon taken down by ignorant developers.
Camperdown elm (Ulmus glabra 'Camperdown')
22 January 2006, Rt. 28, Avon
Every Camperdown elm is a
descendant of a single mutant branch from a tree once
growing in the estate of the Earl of Camperdown in Scotland. The
branch was grafted by the Earl's gardener on the rootstock of Ulmus glabra.
All the subsequent asexual generations of this elm have had to be grafted
this way. There is a large grafting scar on the trunk.
Katsura (Cercidiphyllum japonicum)17 March 2006, Weymouth Great Pond
This map is a link to USDA PLANTS Database
A multi-stemmed gigantic
tree-shrub, one of two old katsuras grown on the grounds of Weymouth
Water Plant
Katsura (Cercidiphyllum japonicum)17 March 2006, Weymouth Great Pond
This map is a link to USDA PLANTS Database
The two trees on the grounds of Weymouth Water Plant are unique: even the
Arnold Arboretum's katsuras are much more modest in size. They are going to share the fate of
the Camperdown elm in Avon: during a recent construction at the water plant, their bed has been used as a parking
lot for trucks and other machinery.
Dawn redwood (Metasequoia glyptostroboides)
5 April 2008, Acushnet
Dawn redwood was described as a living plant only in 1948. The Arnold Arboretum was
instrumental in promoting the tree all around the world, so that it is
now cultivated worldwide. A big surprise
was to find these large redwoods on the grounds of an
abandoned farm in a southern Bristol County town.
Dawn redwood (Metasequoia glyptostroboides)
5 April 2008, Acushnet
Dawn redwood (Metasequoia glyptostroboides)
5 April 2008, Acushnet
Dawn redwood (Metasequoia glyptostroboides)
5 April 2008, Acushnet
Turkish hazel (Corylus colurna)
2 April 2008, Roslindale, Boston
This tree surprised us early in spring, as we had not been prepared to watch a tree
hazelnut on a Boston street! A whole row of these trees is found on Washington St., opposite Forest Hills subway station.
Turkish hazel (Corylus colurna)
2 April 2008, Roslindale, Boston
Turkish hazel can grow into a
pyramidal tree up to 25 m tall, though in Boston it looks far less
impressive. Once a year, however, it puts on a
glorious performance producing brown flags of clumped 7 cm-long catkins.
Turkish hazel (Corylus colurna)
3 June 2008, Roslindale, Boston
The same tree near Forest Hills Station that is shown with catkins early in
April. The crown should have grown pyramidal, if it were not half-dead.
Cedar of Lebanon (Cedrus libani)
17 August 2005, VFW Parkway, Boston
Young cones on the cedar of Lebanon growing near the Catholic Cathedral
Honey-locust (Gleditsia triacanthos)22 May 2005, Avon
This map is a link to USDA PLANTS Database
A cultivar that produces spectacular new
foliage. Though this tree has been deemed
overplanted in the Boston area, it is still rather popular with
businesses looking for a cheap grounds beautification
solution.
Tulip tree (Liriodendron tulipifera)24 June 2005, Walnut Street, Newton
This map is a link to USDA PLANTS Database
Tulip tree flowering in a small public garden opposite Day Middle
School in Newtonville
Copper beech (Fagus sylvatica "Atropunicea")28 May 2005, Weymouth
This map is a link to USDA PLANTS Database
A magnificent beech dwarfing a building
of a funeral home
Spruces
22 September 2009, South Hadley
Tall spruces on the grounds of Notre Dame Cemetery, their alleys forming a cross when viewed
from the air. (Photo taken through the windshield while driving by the cemetery.)
American elm (Ulmus americana)16 February 2009, Moss Hill, Boston
This map is a link to USDA PLANTS Database
A famous native elm that used to be a signature tree of many American towns
but has completely disappeared from the streets since then, killed by
Dutch elm disease. We could not believe our eyes when we found this majestic tree safe and sound
in one of Boston neighborhoods!
Hybrid weeping willows (one of the parents is Salix babylonica)
14 April 2007, University Avenue, Westwood
Believe it or not, Babylon willow does not originate from Babylon. The only country where it
grows naturally is China. Its weeping cultivars reached Europe centuries ago via Central Asia.
Their hybrids with white/crack
willow are now spread all over the world. In the southern States and other warmer countries,
these hybrids have even become invasive.
Spring witchhazel (Hamamelis vernalis)4 February 2008, Arnold Arboretum, Boston
This map is a link to USDA PLANTS Database
This unusual shrub may go into bloom as early as December and keep flowering
for the rest of the winter, until March!
Spring witchhazel (Hamamelis vernalis)4 February 2008, Arnold Arboretum, Boston
This map is a link to USDA PLANTS Database