Tuesday, April 29, 2008
The oak in green (and orange) and flower
Yes the leaves are here now. Green green green. Can it really be this green? The answer is yes, when it's seen in the springtime April light. But oaks at this time of year sometimes start almost orange. Here is another oak not far away. You can follow the green oak back from the autumn of last year in Nick's own more eccentric blog. http://oak-in-autumn.blogspot.com/
Above is the orange oak.
And on here are the oak flowers. The male ones on long catkins. The female flowers too tiny to be seen on a photo this size. Soon the air will be rich with oak pollen.
And here are some more pics. The leaning trees in a shot that captures the look of the New Forest at this time of year where the green of oak and beech among the dark trunks seems almost brighter than the sky.
An amazing cherry tree in blossom in Germany. Finally beach leaf come out just new and bright. Those browney bits that used to be around the bud are now scattered along the edges of all the New Forest roadst. You can eat young beech leaves at this stage, taste a bit like sorrel.
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Apple tree flowers too!
Chestnut in the evening light
This is how the chestnut looked on April 13.
And a week or so before. On the local chestnuts in the New Forest the leaves are all out and the blossom spikes visible. This one is a few days behind.
Light makes so much difference to the look of a tree on a bright sunny day it looks covered in green leaves. Then the next day when the light is lower the leaves seem almost gone. This is what makes it so hard to convert a series of tree pictures into movie showing the changes.
Apple blossoms
Friday, April 25, 2008
The stream's been switched on again
The stream's been switched back on already, I thought they'd take longer. It always makes me feel a bit dizzy looking at the stream when it's first back on, having that rushing movement so close. Now the birds have to compete with the gurgling of the stream as well as the sounds of trams and cars in the distance. Our tree looks much the same but the little beeches and the big poplars are getting really leafy now.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
The tree on our stream
April 23rd
The bushes are really green, the poplar leaves are about half open and the buds on our tree have turned into frothy brownish flowers (maybe someone can tell what sort of tree it is now). The birds are singing like mad, but I haven't heard or seen the woodpecker yet this spring, hope it's still around.
April 18th
No obvious change. You can see groups of buds at the end of the branches, but it's not yet clear what sort of tree it is (you expect us to know? we've only lived here for ten years).
The building on the left is the next-door house, and behind it is the brewery. The glass pyramid that they copied from the Louvre, houses a well where they've drilled down 200 metres to access particularly pure water for brewing.
On the right is an office building with a little patch of lawn in front of it.
April 15th
The tree looks much the same, the stream is still down. The Germans are so efficient, they empty this mill stream about every 18 months and walk through looking for and fixing potential leaking spots. It always seems eerily quiet when the stream's not rushing by.
The stream is syphoned off the Isar river upstream near the zoo, and put back in again in the centre of town. The stream's even still got a working mill on it that generates electricity.
The bushes are really green, the poplar leaves are about half open and the buds on our tree have turned into frothy brownish flowers (maybe someone can tell what sort of tree it is now). The birds are singing like mad, but I haven't heard or seen the woodpecker yet this spring, hope it's still around.
April 18th
No obvious change. You can see groups of buds at the end of the branches, but it's not yet clear what sort of tree it is (you expect us to know? we've only lived here for ten years).
The building on the left is the next-door house, and behind it is the brewery. The glass pyramid that they copied from the Louvre, houses a well where they've drilled down 200 metres to access particularly pure water for brewing.
On the right is an office building with a little patch of lawn in front of it.
April 15th
The tree looks much the same, the stream is still down. The Germans are so efficient, they empty this mill stream about every 18 months and walk through looking for and fixing potential leaking spots. It always seems eerily quiet when the stream's not rushing by.
The stream is syphoned off the Isar river upstream near the zoo, and put back in again in the centre of town. The stream's even still got a working mill on it that generates electricity.
Monday, April 14, 2008
14th April - No water, more green stuff
The tree outside our window
Lucy and I decided to contribute the easiest possible tree photos. The tree right outside our window. Actually there's more than one tree in the pic, so you can choose which one to watch.
The trees are on the opposite side of the mill stream, the "Auer Mühlbach" that flows past our house. I'm not actually certain what kind of tree they are, so perhaps, you can all help identify them. I think that the nearest is a black poplar. I'll have to go up closer to the other to see what it is. This photo was taken on 04. April 2008.
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
April 10: The oak and the chestnut
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
The Wiltshire Chestnut - March 29 to April 8
March 29: This is a chestnut. Amazing tree. About as big as the New Forest Oak but, I imagine, not half as old. Two hundred years maybe, compared to the oak's 5 or 6 hundred. Interesting to see where the forest oak has grazing animals around it, it's branches stop about 5 or 6 feet above the ground. This chestnut however goes right down to the ground.
Here's one of the amazing sticky buds.
April 1: or thereabouts. You can just see the green. Click on the pic to see it large if you don't believe me!
Then the snow came. But look how far the bud has changed.
Now you can see the leaf beneath the snow. And I imagine the thing below the leaf will become a flowering chestnut spike in a week or so
April 8: Yes the green is there. Isn't spring wonderful!
These pictures were taken by Mary. Another Tree Watcher. Email if you would like to join the tree watch and post pics of your tree as it changes.
Sunday, April 6, 2008
April 4 - Suddenly there's snow
The New Forest oak. No sign of the green when I photographed it in falling snow this morning. But it's evening now and all the snow has melted. The green will be there all right tomorrow. It will be interesting to see if the snow slows the greening process.
The leaning trees. The snow added more weight and white to the crown. But they are still standing.
And finally a magnolia with snow smothering the twigs and blossoms.
Friday, April 4, 2008
Green, green everywhere
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Leaning trees New Forest April 1
These trees are leaning heavily as they grow towards the light in a gap in the woods.
When trees lean, they raise their roots up into a mound like this, below the leaning tree.
Then, when they fall, a big circle of earth comes up around the roots. Like this nearby beech tree.
Oaks do not have deep roots, although they start of as acorns with a tap root but these whither in time.
Trees often fall when the extra weight of the leaves grow and tons of water are taken up into the crown of the tree. Even more likely after a wet winter like this one. So they may come down. Or they may live on. They've been leaning for many years and Jeanie's been photographing them for the last 5.
Apple on April fools day
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