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It is a garden in its own right filled with a wealth of native plants that creates a changing seasonal display. I can walk new parts of it. I can walk through at different times of the year. It will take quite some time and many many walks to find out all the secrets this place holds.
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Mostly I look and listen. What will be revealed today?
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I spotted acorns in the leaf litter barrens inside a grove of Hemlocks and looked up. High above the Hemlocks, way to high to reach any leaves, were the Oaks. I looked down again. Where there are trees there will be leaves on the ground and I found what I was looking for, Oak leaves.
I found Oak leaves with rounded edges of the lobes. There is White Oak , Quercus alba here too.
One tiny sprout on a trunk that I was able to reach had a different leaf shape. It was less deeply lobed, but I think it is just due to being in more shade, than it being another species.
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That is four species of Oaks so far. They are all listed as being slow growing valuable lumber trees. Which may be more prized for its wood I am not sure. As a landscape tree, other factors like growth habit, its form and size and fall color would help determine which species may be preferable.
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Here I do not have to choose. Nature does.
1 comment:
Psst! Don't even mention that word "lumber"! You want your hillside to remain pristine.
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