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
July and August Wisdom from the Trees 2014
Tree of the month
Cucumbertree Magnolia • Magnolia acuminata
Gilbert A Smith, ISA Certified Master Arborist
It’s a funny sounding name that doesn’t really capture this tree unless, of course, you’re just looking at the flowers and fruit, which must have been what the botanist that named it was looking at. The hardiest of all the Magnolias the flower isn’t showy, white or pink the way you’d expect. Flowers born on the upper parts of the tree, which grows 60 to 80 feet, you generally don’t know that you are looking at a magnolia at all. If you look real hard the fruit does look a little like a cucumber. I recommend it as a replacement for Ash trees and it’s among the best.