Showing posts with label Larch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Larch. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Tamarack



Most needles gone by late November.

 New needles just poke from buds in late March.


Needles a centimeter long in mid-May.


 Full-grown needles and pollen cones at the end of May.

I used to frequent the local Veterans Administration grounds, where kind authorities welcomed the town's youth soccer league to their lawns.  Since my kids have aged out, and since it's not on any of my neighborhood walking routes, I seldom visit these days.  But when I do, its for only one thing: tamaracks.  

Tamarack, aka larch (Larix laricina), is not technically a native, since its real home is the great boreal forest of the far north.  This gangly, awkward-looking tree is a prince in frog's skin: an important species in the coniferous forest of Canada as far north as trees grow at all--the edge of the arctic tundra.  The genus Larix is circumboreal, its eleven species occurring in northern Europe and Asia as well as North America.  Our well-grown Brockton VA tamaracks were planted, but as forest royalty in their own place, they have my respect.  

Larch is the more unusual in being deciduous--one of a small group of conifers whose soft needles turn yellow and drop in the fall just as most broad-leaves do.  I visit to watch this seasonal play, the yellowing and dropping of needles, the new suit of fresh green in late spring, and the little cones that follow.

Since I hadn't been by in over a month, I took a different highway exit home than usual so I could pay my respects.  

I was shocked to find every single tree gone.  A neat bare circle of earth marked the place each had stood.  New fence posts hinted at one likely reason they were gone, though I don't know what prompted the fence.  I stood still at the nearest circle, as at a freshly-covered grave, before bending down in a forlorn hope of finding something.  Tattered cones met my fingers, and I carefully collected three, thinking there might be a few seeds remaining, and perhaps one or two that would germinate.  

Of course, these had been mature trees that had borne cones many times, and as my eyes wandered aimless in the little wood adjacent I saw several older teenager tamaracks standing there, hands in pockets, graveyard-whistling a little and hoping not to be noticed by the humans that had taking their parents.  

The sight of these gave me hope.  Some bore cones of their own, so that if the seeds I found today don't germinate, fresher ones might.  They, too, would undoubtedly meet the chainsaw someday--all things die--but I hoped not til they had grown to be as old as their parents, and not til they had their own strapping youngsters established in some safely-neglected bit of woods.  

 All that remains of the tree photographed at top.


 Youngsters know they will live forever.

Thursday, June 4, 2015

Spring 3f: All the Rest

Although the number of tree species I track through the year seems big to me, I know there are many others, and sometimes these catch my attention.  

Here they are for May.

Larch, a boreal forest tree and our only deciduous conifer, on May 1st (2), 21st and 27th (2); Silverberry, an alien covered in silvery "hairs," on the 1st, 8th, 14th, & 28th (2).



A Mystery Tree growing right
 in my back yard on May 5th (2), 11th,14th (2) and 21st (2).  It's 
probably a choke cherry.

Witchhazel, whose bark make the drugstore astringent, on May 4th (2), 7th, 11th, 13th, and 28th (2).

European buckthorn, an alien invasive, and the card-carrying native, alder,
 on May 8th.



Garlic mustard, an alien invasive, violets (2) and highbush blueberry (2) on May 11th; white pine on the 11th and 23rd (3--the second with male cones ready for action, the last showing female cones pendant near ends of branches).





Mulberry on the 14th (2) and 18th;
Fox grape on the 15th.

Ginkgo, an ancient gymnosperm
(akin to pines) that is the only remaining member of its class,
on the 17th (2) and 28th (3).


Lilac on the 17th


Wild geranium, eastern red columbine,
(2) and black locust on the 23rd.




Black raspberry, oriental bittersweet (alien) and bayberry on the 30th.



And this ends the interminable Spring 3!