Saturday, October 20, 2012
More Gingko photos
This week collected ginkgo seeds. Surprised and oddly excited to discover that several of the trees I thought were male, are really female. Maybe the last time I looked they had not reached tree puberty yet. This changes my hypothesis about this long row of trees. More than half were female. So they must be seedling raised, not grafts. Good. There must be 10 female gingko trees in this treeway.
There's nothing about the tree's anatomy that tells us she's female. Only the presence of the seeds below the tree, gives it away.
Another female ginkgo tree in the same treeway.
Ginkgo branches, laden with seed. In my earlier days, I called these "fruit". The look like fruit, are fleshy like fruit, and contain an inner seed like fruit. But botanically, the derivation of the flesh is a different part of the seed bearing structure, so the fleshy part is the outer layer of the seed. Confusing.
Pleased the camera took some nice pics this time.
Ginkgo fruit scattered on the ground. Even with so many, I don't smell the butyric acid that bothers many people. Unless I pick them up, and smell my fingers. Then it's there.
There's nothing about the tree's anatomy that tells us she's female. Only the presence of the seeds below the tree, gives it away.
Another female ginkgo tree in the same treeway.
Ginkgo branches, laden with seed. In my earlier days, I called these "fruit". The look like fruit, are fleshy like fruit, and contain an inner seed like fruit. But botanically, the derivation of the flesh is a different part of the seed bearing structure, so the fleshy part is the outer layer of the seed. Confusing.
Ginkgo fruit scattered on the ground. Even with so many, I don't smell the butyric acid that bothers many people. Unless I pick them up, and smell my fingers. Then it's there.
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Finches
Through the glass of the home office window. The little point-and-shoot camera lacks the crystalline clarity of the Nikon super duper SXYZ camera. For that matter, so does the glass. Its OK. The birds don't mind. Carpodacus mexicanus.
Monday, October 15, 2012
Tale of Two Ginkgos
These 2 trees are the same age, grown from seed from the same parent. They were started from seed collected by my Dad, about 13 years ago.
This tree was planted in the ground about 11 years ago. This is my back yard. The tree first spent about 2 years of growing in a flower pot. I'm guessing about 20 or 25 feet tall. It's a beautiful tree. I'm proud of it. This area of yard is the dogs' "restroom". They pee and poop here daily. The poop gets cleaned up, mostly, although some is missed. It gets watered weekly or every other week, to rinse the grass and ground to prevent odor. The watering, and the nitrogen from the dog urine and feces, have resulted in rapid strong growth.
This photo is taken today. The leaves remain dark green.
The trunk is too big for my hand to reach around.
The leaves have the typical bilobar appearance for ginkgo. As a younger tree, the leaves were larger and had a deeper cleft.
This tree is the same age, from the same source at the same time. It was kept in a container for one additional year, and planted in the front yard. It gets watered occasionally, but not nearly as often as the tree in the back yard. Like that tree, it's basically in the full sun. No "doggie special treats." It's much smaller than the first tree. About 10 feet tall, so less than half as tall.
This photo is also taken today. The leaves are already bright yellow.
I can easily grasp this trunk. No where near the diameter as its twin.
The leaves are similar size and morphology. Beautiful leaves.
*
I think the entire difference in growth and leaf senescence is due to the doggie fertilizer and watering. There has been no chemical fertilizer and no other difference that I can see.
This tree was planted in the ground about 11 years ago. This is my back yard. The tree first spent about 2 years of growing in a flower pot. I'm guessing about 20 or 25 feet tall. It's a beautiful tree. I'm proud of it. This area of yard is the dogs' "restroom". They pee and poop here daily. The poop gets cleaned up, mostly, although some is missed. It gets watered weekly or every other week, to rinse the grass and ground to prevent odor. The watering, and the nitrogen from the dog urine and feces, have resulted in rapid strong growth.
This photo is taken today. The leaves remain dark green.
The trunk is too big for my hand to reach around.
The leaves have the typical bilobar appearance for ginkgo. As a younger tree, the leaves were larger and had a deeper cleft.
This tree is the same age, from the same source at the same time. It was kept in a container for one additional year, and planted in the front yard. It gets watered occasionally, but not nearly as often as the tree in the back yard. Like that tree, it's basically in the full sun. No "doggie special treats." It's much smaller than the first tree. About 10 feet tall, so less than half as tall.
This photo is also taken today. The leaves are already bright yellow.
I can easily grasp this trunk. No where near the diameter as its twin.
The leaves are similar size and morphology. Beautiful leaves.
*
I think the entire difference in growth and leaf senescence is due to the doggie fertilizer and watering. There has been no chemical fertilizer and no other difference that I can see.
Sunday, October 14, 2012
Transplanted Trees
The Almaden Duke Cherry did perk up a lot. That's what a week of cool weather and rain can do. The leaves are not yet yellowing for fall. A few are damaged, but overall it took the transplanting well. With little root damage, and little loss of leaf, I think it's OK to let it bear cherries next Spring. If it chooses to do so. It will be nice to get our own fruit the first Spring here.
The Sal's Fig I moved the first week of ownership, last July. TLC and watering every week resulted in a healthy move despite the midSummer timing. These are its first figs, ever. They are very tasty. I think better than Hardy Chicago or Petite Negri. That might be my imagination.
That little Maple I moved last week. There is some sunburn of the leaves. That would not have happened if I'd waited a week, but they are about to fall off anyway. It's ready to settle in for winter.
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