Tree IDs moving to Instagram, potentially.

@practically.design

For practically the whole summer, I was unable to post tree ids because I was changing how this website stored its files. With everything back to normal, I have a choice as to whether to stay on this website or just post on Instagram. Instagram is a bit easier to use and it means I’ll be able to post on my phone, but it’ll make it harder to search for specific trees. My thought is that I’ll just post the nice-looking trees on Instagram and the low-quality images on this website.

I have a huge backlog of hundreds of tree photos on my phone now. The thing is, the photos are from a long time ago and so, if I post them, the date will be very much inaccurate… Everything is a bit of a mess, if you can’t tell. I hope to figure it out by spring of 2023.

Kousa Dogwood Flowers

Cornus kousa IDed by camouflage-like bark and ovate leaves with wavy margins and arcuate venation. Each cluster of tiny flowers is surrounded by four pointed bracts. On this tree, the bracts are green but they turn white. Kousa dogwoods are monoecious.

Honey Locust

Gleditsia triacanthos IDed by plated bark with lenticels, pinnately compound leaves, and racemes attached to leaf axils on the younger branches. Honey locusts are polygamo-dioecious.

Willow Oak

Quercus phellos IDed by long, oblong leaves, usually stiff, with prominent midribs; smooth leaf margins that tuck slightly down; gray crusty bark with relatively smooth, light gray branches; light green new growth with white lenticels. I found it quite hard to ID this tree in the winter, but the leaves give it away. The bark is actually very distinct, especially at the age of most of the NYC willow oaks: it tends to be really rough and brownish at the base and becomes smoother and grayer a little further up.

The leaves look like willow leaves but they are not serrate and their tips have short bristles

Japanese Cherry Extrafloral Nectaries

Prunus serrulata leaf IDed by ovate shape, dark green color, light green underside, serrate margins, and two nectar glands on the petiole at the base of the leaf,

Bloodgood Japanese Maple

Acer palmatum IDed by distinct dark red spring foliage; rounded crown and overall shape; maple-like, deeply lobed palmate leaves with 5-9 tipped leaf blades and serrate margins. I also referenced Columbia University’s listing of trees. You can tell it’s not another Japanese variety because this tree is whole-leaf not lace-leaf (the leaves have a flat surface and are not feathery).

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