Matias
Been here much more than a while
- Location
- Butte County
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What tree??C-Section Birth. Like to know the story with this tree.
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I think that’s considered lucky. Maybe you should go get a lottery ticket??Not actually a tree oddity but a seed oddity. Anyone else ever encounter a triple samara like this? Came off a young-ish sugar Maple across the street from my house. My son spotted it.
I tend to see them once every few years in big leaf maples.Not actually a tree oddity but a seed oddity. Anyone else ever encounter a triple samara like this? Came off a young-ish sugar Maple across the street from my house. My son spotted it.



The first photo looks like two wildly different species, so very unlikely to be a graft. Probably tied together pretty well though!Interesting (to me) graft I found at work today.
I'm not sure what forced the tree in the lower picture to grow like that, maybe an old blowdown, but a gentle tug indicated the top was firmly set in the ground. It is sprouting upwards now. The perseverance of trees never ceases to amaze me. Not sure on genus/species. Swampy low lying area. Salix maybe?
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We get quite a few of the ones in the bend over photo. Snow load bends the saplings down and some of them stay there. Then the suckers start growing upward. I have a few black ash ones like that along my driveway, and me plowing five foot snow drifts on top of them probably contribute quite a bid to them staying down like that. The ones around here don't seem to live all that long. Maybe get 3-4" in diameter and then die off. The white cedar saplings get bent over but seem to manage to straighten themselves back up by the end of summer. Other, not so much.Interesting (to me) graft I found at work today.
I'm not sure what forced the tree in the lower picture to grow like that, maybe an old blowdown, but a gentle tug indicated the top was firmly set in the ground. It is sprouting upwards now. The perseverance of trees never ceases to amaze me. Not sure on genus/species. Swampy low lying area. Salix maybe?
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Thanks for the info!! Very different species indeed, I wasn't sure what to call it.The first photo looks like two wildly different species, so very unlikely to be a graft. Probably tied together pretty well though!
That little whip is rad, I’ll find things like that where the top got pinned by a fallen something, then roots. Willow is great at this, as well as vine maple, and western red cedar in my area.
Pine gall?I found this pine mess in the yard the other day, but I've no idea which tree it fell from. I wish I had seen it alive.
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