Trees from a distance

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I like the thread too. Learnin' a lot. Only thing I don't like.......when the other folk only use the Latin name!
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that is when you GOOGLE it and learn more
 
This is a bad picture but see if you guys can get both of them. sorry guys that is a bad pic. EZ your up anytime, sorry dude.
 

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that is when you GOOGLE it and learn more

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You are right. Sorry, I guess I was looking for the easy way out.

Carya glabra - Pignut Hickory. Member of the Juglandaceae Family (Walnut). Native to North America.
 
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that is when you GOOGLE it and learn more

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You are right. Sorry, I guess I was looking for the easy way out.

Carya glabra - Pignut Hickory. Member of the Juglandaceae Family (Walnut). Native to North America.

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YA - GEE - how do you THINK I know the real names of tree. to me they are all big things with leaves on them. when the guys SAY - GO climb that BEECH - I would look really silly setting my line in a hickory. YA think . . . .

I have several sites that have helped me

JZ - learning something ever day
 
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Are there trees in that picture? Was there something on your lens?

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HaHa. My camera was just out of focus i guess. Thier are trees there you just need to get real drunk to see them I guess;) I just wanted to throw a pic up here to bring people back to the thread.
Sorry guys this is tough. We do agree thier is a softwood and hardwood in the pic though.
Banjo your not to far off. but no
 
Matt - How about Cedrus on the left and some kind of Prunus or maybe a Paper Mulberry (Broussonetia papyrifera) on the right...??
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-Diane-
 
Nice. Pinus virginiana(virginia Pine) it is! All over the place here in western Maryland. Dogwood is a great guess. Thats what I would have guessed. But no. You cant tell from the picture anyway. Hint: The leaves are fairly large and cordate with a pointy tip

How did you tell the virginia pine aborer? Just a guess, given the location?
 
Sorry guys but no. I'll just give it to you, enless you guys want one more guess? We can get a good picture up!
nice avatar EZ
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Virginia pine was my best guess for MD. You see them pretty regularly if you head to the serpentine barrens in SE PA.
As for the other...Davidia involucrata?
 
hold on MattyD!

I'm just reading this.

don't post yet, let me catch up.

i had to get away from the other posts on tree buzz.

It's been 2 weeks since I've been on here and already the second post pissed me off.

hold on let me take a loook.
 
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The leaves are fairly large and cordate with a pointy tip



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Well it sure doesn't look cordate with a pointy tip in that blurry picture, but if you say so, then I'd say a Caltalpa Tree.

Catalpa speciosa
 

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