skip to main
|
skip to sidebar
Green-Wood Cemetery Trees
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Japanese Snowbell
This Japanese snowbell (
Styrax japonicus
) looked more like a shrub than a tree. It's the fruit that caught my eye.
It's a small ovoid drupe held in a five-lobed calyx.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
►
2020
(1)
►
March
(1)
►
2016
(1)
►
October
(1)
►
2015
(3)
►
September
(1)
►
June
(1)
►
March
(1)
►
2013
(1)
►
May
(1)
►
2012
(5)
►
October
(2)
►
June
(1)
►
May
(1)
►
January
(1)
►
2011
(9)
►
December
(2)
►
November
(1)
►
October
(1)
►
June
(1)
►
April
(1)
►
March
(3)
►
2010
(50)
►
October
(1)
►
September
(4)
►
July
(4)
►
June
(12)
►
May
(5)
►
April
(6)
►
March
(9)
►
February
(6)
►
January
(3)
▼
2009
(66)
►
December
(9)
►
November
(7)
►
October
(11)
►
September
(15)
▼
August
(15)
Saucer Magnolia
Horse Chestnut
Dogwood
More Japanese Maples
Paperbark Maple
Franklin Tree
Silk Tree
Weeping Beech
dragonflies
Camperdown Elm
seed pod revisited
Japanese Snowbell
Mulberry
Lotus
Japanese Maples
►
July
(9)
Related Blogs and Sites
Oakland Cemetery Trees
Green-Wood Cemetery
Green-Wood Discovery
Tree Identification Guide
The Franklinia Story
Ten Thousand Trees
Arboreality
Tree Notes
trees, if you please
New York City Garden
Amazon.com Widgets
Labels
anthracnose
(2)
apple
(2)
beech
(4)
birch
(5)
camperdown elm
(2)
chapel
(3)
cherry
(7)
conifer
(2)
dawn redwood
(2)
deciduous conifer
(3)
dogwood
(4)
evergreen
(5)
fringetree
(2)
golden rain tree
(3)
graft
(3)
heath
(2)
hickory
(1)
horse chestnut
(3)
identification
(2)
japanese maple
(4)
japanese snowbell
(2)
katsura
(1)
legume
(6)
linden
(1)
living fossil
(2)
london plane
(1)
lotus
(3)
magnolia
(5)
maple
(10)
mulberry
(2)
oleaceae
(3)
paperbark maple
(2)
pear
(2)
persimmon
(1)
pine
(4)
saucer magnolia
(3)
silk tree
(2)
snow
(5)
snowdrop
(2)
stewartia
(1)
storax
(3)
sweet gum
(3)
sycamore
(3)
theaceae
(2)
tulip tree
(2)
water lily
(1)
willow
(2)
About Me
katie
View my complete profile
No comments:
Post a Comment