Tree identification help(new pic)

Started by okie64, February 03, 2011, 08:03:00 PM

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Pat B

Make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes!
TGMM Family of the Bow

TroutGuide

I'm guessing locust but the thornless kind honey or black whitchever does not have thorns never can remenber.
Brian Harris
"I rarely ever give a definate answer about hunting or fishing."  Me

Pat B

The buds don't look like honey locust and definately not black locust. They look very much like the mulberry in my tree book.
Make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes!
TGMM Family of the Bow

Don Stokes

Both honey locust and black locust have thorns. Honey locust has long, branched thorns and black locust has pairs of thorns at the leaf bases. The thornless locust is a greenhouse cultivar that doesn't grow wild.

Ash has opposite branches and these are alternate, so it's not ash.
Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.- Ben Franklin

okie64

Anybody who said mulberry was right. I took a piece of this wood to my uncle who works for a timber company and he said it was white mulberry. Actually he called it by its genus name first and when I looked at him like he was an idiot he said the common name for it is white mulberry. My grandpa called it paper mulberry. Its always amusing listening to the two of them argue over tree names, my uncle calls them by their proper names and my grandpa calls them by whatever he was taught to call them 60 years ago.

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