In honor of Arbor Day gatherings around the country, we look at one of the rarest trees found in eastern North America; principally located on the limestone cliffs of North Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee.
Donald Culross Peattie writes, “An icy ran was falling—rain that presently turned to blinding snow—and the roaring creeks of Tennessee were rising fast, on the last day of February, 1796, when André Michaux stopped his horse, somewhere in the lonely woods twelve miles from Fort Blount, to examine a curious tree.” The famed French plantsman knew he was looking at a tree few white men had ever seen.
Panicles that hang like Parisian chandleries
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"They’re called Kentucky yellowwoods," I'd answer. (Or as the botanists say "Cladrastis kentukea.") The common name comes from the color of the heartwood. Their amazing flowers are celebrations borne in drooping terminal white panicles twelve to fourteen inches long, five to six inches broad. They are like a display of fireworks without the noise, soft explosions. The three growing at Ijams are the only ones I have knowingly seen.
Today, the bees were loving the fragrant panicles, and luckily for them, the nature center has plenty of limestone bedrock, so the trees should do very well for many years to come.
Plant a tree! Arbor Day celebrated at Ijams.
Plant a tree! Arbor Day celebrated at Ijams.
3 comments:
Neat blog. Thanks!
well hello again troutbirder. I hope all is well in Minnesota.
This morning I listened to a scarlet tanager sing while I had my morning coffee.
What a gorgeous flowering tree! And to think it is rare. The flowers remind me a little of wisteria flowers.
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