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
Traveling South with the Arborsmiths, Part 2
Backyard Wisdom by Gilbert A. Smith, ISA Board Certified Master Arborist
all photo credits: Lesley Bruce Smith
In Northern Illinois the dominant species, the king of the prairie, remains the giant Burr Oak. Standing strong where most trees fail. You can see it on hill tops and out crops from Chicago to Rockford and all the way through Iowa. Burr Oak still grows down south but it becomes far less prominent, while the Red and Shingle Oak, Sweet Gum, Red Maple and of course Sycamore are the trees we notice at 60 MPH.
The Flowering Dogwood, in October, was in burgundy fall color taking over the understory. In May before the big trees foliate, when the Dogwoods and Redbuds dress the forest in white and pink lace it is wonderful to behold the Tennessee and Kentucky woods. Though it is one of the best known flowering trees in the country I’d never even seen a flowering Dogwood until I was 17, when I left Illinois.