Blooms in January 2012 ? Earliest in my memory…

North Aurora, Naperville Shrub

This beauty was actually in bloom in late January 2012, incredible!

Blooming in the snow in Glen Ellyn Il.

Yellow blooms in early February, crazy early for a typical winter in Wheaton!

Blooming in early February!, esp. stunning en masse.

Hammemalis 'Diane', w/ red blooms in winter, awesome fall color too

 

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Alerce trees: witnessing one of the oldest- known living organisms on planet earth….

3200-3500 yr old specimen, incredible!

Slow growing, and resilient

What an incredible environment- coastal temp. rainforests of Southern Chile!

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Welcoming in a new year, snow free!

Happy New Year! and with the absence of winter thus far, who can complain? :) Can you remember a snow free December? Ever?

Even the streams and canyons are ice free!

IF we do get in on some arctic air, it could spell trouble if there is little or no snow cover, only time will tell! It’s a jolly good time to get in a hike at Starved Rock, and a cold brew afterwards in nearby Utica!

 

 

 

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Winterscapes in a Wheaton wetland garden

fruit attracts birds in winter

Add color w/ a massing of this beauty for winter color!

Will grow well in your gardens, Dupage, Kane or Cook Co.

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Live Christmas Trees – another reason to buy local:

This disease is becoming a huge problem everywhere. Best to buy a locally grown tree, pref. not a Frazier fir!

Workers in Zionville, North Carolina, ship out Fraser firs—and perhaps a deadly disease. | Coke Whitworth/Aurora Photos  

The Christmas Tree Curse
Ho ho ho and an incurable pathogen


A tree infected with the cinnamomi fungus | Courtesy of Linda Haugen/USDA Forest Service/Bugwood.org
The Fraser fir is the ideal Christmas tree. Fragrant, strong-limbed, and long-lasting when cut, it has found its way to the White House’s Blue Room more than any other tree over the past 50 years. It is also a vector to the most destructive plant pathogen you’ve never heard of.
The shapely Fraser fir, a southern Appalachian native now farmed extensively in nurseries, is a common carrier (and victim) of Phytophthora cinnamomi, a deadly water mold wreaking havoc on ecosystems around the world. When infected Frasers are replanted, the disease gets an opportunity to spread to new farms and neighboring plant life.
Originating in Papua New Guinea, soil-borne cinnamomi arrived in the United States at least 200 years ago via agricultural trade. The root-rot that it causes transformed the forests of the Southeast, killing huge numbers of American chestnut and shortleaf pine. Scientists didn’t pinpoint it as the source of this dieback until 1948, by which time it was ubiquitous in the South.
A cousin of the sudden oak death fungus devastating forests on the West Coast, cinnamomi now affects hundreds of plant and tree species on six continents. In recent decades it has marched westward, killing rare manzanita in California and native oaks in Mexico. It also thrives in avocado orchards, and in fact is the limiting factor in avocado production worldwide.
Cinnamomi continues to get worse. It shows up in new places and on new hosts,” says Everett Hansen, an emeritus professor of botany and plant pathology at Oregon State University who’s been studying the fungus for 30 years. Climate change may open up vast new regions to the pathogen, including in Hansen’s home state. “There’s evidence of cinnamomi becoming increasingly active in areas farther north than it has historically been present,” he says.
There is no cure for the fungus, but tree farmers and nursery owners can limit its spread by avoiding the transport of contaminated soil and not letting water pool in affected areas. You might also think twice about replanting that living Christmas tree, especially if it’s a Fraser, balsam, or noble fir. —Nate Seltenrich
Edward  R. Max
Max’s Greener Places 

site and blog @ maxlandscape.com

 

 

 

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A great project completed in September 2011 in West Chicago:

New tiered stone walls and landscapes

seen from before to after:

During renovation....

walk to be removed

during lunch break - this bizarre sky!

tree cut out

new Unilock 'Quarry stone' arrives!

New walls going up

Caps are called Ledegstone (Unilock product)

Landscape will fill in w/ time.

clay paver walk, stone steps

Taking care to preserve burr oak w/ new blocks

Clay paver walk w/ nat. stone steps

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Native fall blooming Witchhazel (Hammemalis) shrub

A fun surprise to find a shrub in bloom in November! Fall color is great, and useful in wooded, or shady places:

File:Koeh-070.jpg

fragrant, blooms til freezing temps arive

Woodland shrub of Glen Ellyn

 

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Estimating a tree’s age- useful tool!

Thank you Mr. Bowles for all this great info!

Archives su Into the Wild Links


Field Notes

Telling a Tree’s Age

Favorite Forest Giants

We always knew our favorite forest giants were old.
Now we can know how old.

Photo: Marlene and Joe Nowak

Tracing a tree back to its roots has never been simpler. With a newly developed aging chart, the lifespans of the region’s giant old-growth trees are just a measurement away.

This useful tool resulted from a 1996 study of Chicago Wilderness’ old-growth forests. Researchers Marlin Bowles of The Morton Arboretum and Michael Jones of Christopher Burke Engineering calculated the age of trees in Chicago region forests by collecting core samples from roughly 600 area specimens. The cores provided rings for the scientists to count without harming the tree (since the extractions were only 3/16″ wide, the trees’ living tissue was hardly affected).

The researchers say that aging forest trees can help nature enthusiasts learn more about the history of their local environment. “If you can understand how old trees are in a forest or a stand of trees, then you can have a better understanding of the history of the stand,” Bowles explains.

Bowles, a plant conservation biologist, explains that an area with mostly young trees must have experienced a major logging or fire event that took out all the older trees. “If you have a stand with very old trees in it,” Bowles continues, “you know that you can go back a long time before the stand was disturbed.” The study found that the oldest trees in the area, mostly white oaks, date back to the early- to mid-1800s, when settlers began to thin some of the wooded groves in northern Illinois. The data also confirms the conventional wisdom that human fire suppression has caused the number of sugar maples to increase, while oak and shrub populations decline.

For someone hoping to discover this sort of rich history in a nearby preserve, the process of calculating a tree’s age takes a little botany and a little high school math.

First, identify the tree species. (For those just starting out, a field guide may be helpful, but a tree ID field trip with a naturalist is probably better for learning). Next, measure the tree’s circumference with a tape measure or a length of string and a ruler. The tape should be wrapped around the tree at chest height to produce an accurate measurement. Then, divide the circumference measurement by pi (3.1416) to get the tree’s diameter. Finally, check the chart to determine the specimen’s age. Was the tree starting out in life as Du Sable was building the first cabin in Chicago in 1779? When Illinois was becoming a state in 1818? Or was it sprouting from an acorn when engineers reversed the Chicago River in 1900? (See more historical dates.)

This technique will prove 90 percent accurate for forest-grown trees listed on the chart. Trees that have spent some part of their lives at a small size (perhaps due to poor growing conditions) may be older than size would suggest. Trees grown in the open, like those in a suburban backyard or a savanna, will be much younger for their size, because the added sunlight speeds their growth. As the chart shows, different species grow at different rates.

Tree Species Ages at Different Diameters
Bass- White Sugar Bur/Swamp Red Red Shagbark White

Inches

Centimeters

wood

Ash

Maple

White Oak

Elm

Oak

Hickory

Oak

10

25

60 75 75 66 73 76 102 84

12

30

70 87 88 79 86 89 116 100

14

35

79 99 100 91 99 102 129 115

16

40

89 110 112 104 112 115 142 129

18

45

98 121 124 117 124 128 155 144

20

50

107 131 136 129 136 141 167 159

22

55

116 142 147 142 148 154 179 173

24

60

125 152 159 154 160 116 190 187

26

65

133 162 170 167 172 179 202 201

28

70

142 172 181 179 184 191 212 215

30

75

150 182 192 192 196 203 223 229

31

80

159 191 203 204 207 215 234 243

34

86

169 203 216 219 221 230 246 260

35

90

175 210 224 229 230 239 254 271

37

95

184 220 235 242 241 251 264 285

39

100

192 229 245 254 253 263 274 298

— Tegan Jones with Marlin Bowles and Michael Jones

Related Articles:

Read more about this research on old-growth forests on page 5 of the July 2005 CW Journal (PDF document).

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What’s in bloom: mid October (fall blooming Crocus)

Yes- crocus in fall! Who knew. Beautiful too!

Crocus blooms amoungst the fallen leaves

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Extend the color in your landscape w/ fall foliage

Hammemalis x

Witchhazel 'Arnold's Promise' great fall color, med sized shrub, winter flower

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