Tags
- Acer saccharum
- American Beech Tree
- American Chestnut Tree
- American Elm
- American Forests
- American Hop Hornbeam
- American Linden
- American Oak Tree
- American Sycamore
- American planetree
- Anemone
- Anthracnose
- Apple Tree Borer
- Apples
- Arbor Day
- Arboreturn America
- Arborvitae
- Aspens
- Austrian Pine
- Autumn
- BNI
- Bald Eagle
- Baldcypress
- Barred Owl
- Bellwort
- Betula Nigra
- Betula alba
- Betula papyrifera
- Birch
- Black Cherry
- Black Locust
- Black Oak
- Bloodroot
- Blue Spruce
- Burr Oak
- Business Networking International
- Buttonball tree
- Callery Pears
- Captain
- Carya illinoensis
- Carya ovata
- Catalpa
- Catalpa speciosa
- Cedar
- Cedar Waxwing
- Celtis occidentalis
- Cercis canadensis
- Chalet Garden Centers
- Chicago Botanic Garden
- Chicago summers
Resource Articles from Gilbert Smith, ISA Board Certified Master Arborist
and Lesley Bruce Smith, ISA Certified Arborist
Interview With a Tree About Bark
Backyard Wisdom
by: Gilbert A Smith, ISA Board Certified Master Arborist
I’m speaking with a 60 year old Black Locust, Robinia pseudoacacia, who grows in the village parkway in Wilmette, Illinois.
Gil: Mr Black Locust I couldn’t help but notice the beautiful flutes and ridges in your bark. I had to stop and talk. Why is your bark so different from other trees, like the smooth bark of a Beech for instance or the white bark of a Birch?
Mr. Black Locust: Well let me first clear up one misconception you have concerning me.
Tree of the Month • Black Locust
January 2016 Tree of the Month and Backyard Wisdom (combined)
Black Locust Robinia pseudoaccacia
by: Gilbert A Smith, ISA certified Master Arborist
In the early 1900’s unscrupulous land speculators sold property in the great plains claiming buyers could “strike it rich” farming the vast grasslands. Originally plains looked green and promising in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Nebraska, and Kansas because although the annual rainfall was only 10 inches the prairie grasses were well adapted. Like all grasses, when the rain stops, they simply go dormant and when the drought ends they green up. (Note, this is the same today with our lawn grasses so we really do not need to water as much as we do.) The native grasses were tough and the thick roots that were so hard to till, held the soil in place. The modern sod busting plow and tractor, they thought, were just the tools to exploit this treasure. Hundreds of thousands headed west to make their fortune.