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On the Making of Oak trees (c) by Kirk Jordan
Today's send features three different species of Oak, which - on quick inspection, appear to be so very different from one another as to belong to very different tree families.
Trees in the Oak family tend to have certain shared qualities: floral Catkins (the wormy flower things), hard yellow-tan wood, dense bulky form (with notable exceptions), acorns, tough grey-brown bark etc. -- but they manifest an extremely wide variation in leaf shapes.
Pic one is of a willow oak, with thin willowy leaves.
Pics two and tree showcase emerging Scarlet-Oak, or possibly Pin-Oak leaves,
while
Pics four and five feature the still tender leaves of a scrubby Post Oak (or Possibly a Bur Oak)
--
For More on Oak IDs see:
http://forestry.about.com/cs/treeid/a/hard_tree_id.htm
The Mighty Works Project exists to assist you getting a lobotomy. Wait. Make that... The Mighty Works Project exists to make you a lay-botanist.
The Mighty Works Project exists to assist you getting a lobotomy. Wait. Make that... The Mighty Works Project exists to make you a lay-botanist.
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