Tinged with pink
Unsure about this one, strange coloration… is it just done flowering?
Little Otter Creek Wildlife Management Area (Ferrisburgh)
Highlighting the difference in bark patterns between Prunus pensylvanica (this observation) and Betula lenta (next observation). One doesn't often get to see examples of these two species of similar size in such close proximity.
I have seen some young saplings of Prunus pensylvanica in this area.
Blue morph….Gorgeous
Cinnamon under tail denotes Bohemian vs White for Cedar
This bird has a short beak.
Huge Butternut on Lake St in St. Albans. Got invited back in the fall to gather nuts! Tons of shells on the ground, and has a resident squirrel :)
Long terminal winter buds compared to width of bud. Most likely progeny of the large 24 in diameter butternut behind dollar general.
A real trooper…. Wow…. I had to stop when I noticed this behemoth Butternut.
Suffering from Butternut Canker:
http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/45601
Magnificent solitary roadside elm tree
Large Specimen. Looks healthy as of 10/2022.
Beautiful monster elm, I might have to come back and ask to take cuttings or look for progeny 😍 Doesn’t appear to have any crown dieback.
Quite a large specimen. Looks healthy as of 10/23.
This is the big tree on the edge of the parking lot, to the left of the overlook at the scenic vista.
Photos from when I found a road-burned chipmunk and picked it up from the middle of 116. It went to a wildlife rehab and was successfully released back where I had found it :) 🐿️
Quite large dbh for a healthy elm
Butternut canker present but a large healthy tree with more than 70% of its canopy still intact. Could be another potential candidate for nut collection.
The trunk appears canker free, need closer inspection. Potentially a good candidate for nut collection next summer!
3rd chestnut this year. Feeling pretty lucky.
Sprouting vigorously after fire of May 2021
not healthy, but not quite dead yet either
Another potential quercus x hawkinsiae ?
if the acorn caps are not flat enough for Q. rubra.
See discussion at --> https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/22060816
Canopy leaves look a bit more like macrocarpa or the hybrid. No idea what this is.
Sun leaves, roadside.
Forest edge. Sun leaves.
4 deep sinuses, nearly glabrous abaxially.
@tsn have any clue? It looks like a white oak hybrid…. Possibly Quercus x bebbiana or Quercus x fernowii?
The majority types of oaks on the property are Q. montana and Q. alba, so potentially it could also be Q. x saulii… it’s interesting but there is so much variation in the hybrid leaf margins, i’m unsure.
Sources:
http://oaks.of.the.world.free.fr/quercus_bebbiana.htm
https://swbiodiversity.org/seinet/taxa/index.php?taxon=337409&clid=3503
http://oaks.of.the.world.free.fr/quercus_fernowii.htm
https://swbiodiversity.org/seinet/taxa/index.php?taxon=305029&clid=3510
http://oaks.of.the.world.free.fr/quercus_saulei.htm
https://swbiodiversity.org/seinet/taxa/index.php?taxon=303050&clid=3510
major surprise to see this little bird foraging in the yard today
Piney Hill Rd. Monkton- private property
-with mature involucres
Blooming on Dec. 18!
Amazing buttressed trunk, like an intertwined rope
Green Mountain National Forest
@charlie -- I found it!