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The 2023 Lawn, Garden, Landscape Party Discussion


Damage In Tolland
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On 8/16/2023 at 9:34 AM, TauntonBlizzard2013 said:

Bought a couple of Lombardy poplars to add some interest in my backyard.

@tamarack @dendrite

 

Anything I should be on the lookout for? Seems like they are extremely fast growing 

On a site with decent fertility, they could add 4-5 feet annually.  However, they may not make it to age 30 and might be 75 feet tall by then.  (This coming from a forester who is used to 100-year (plus) ages for spruce, maple and pine, so 30 seems short.)

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7 hours ago, tamarack said:

On a site with decent fertility, they could add 4-5 feet annually.  However, they may not make it to age 30 and might be 75 feet tall by then.  (This coming from a forester who is used to 100-year (plus) ages for spruce, maple and pine, so 30 seems short.)

So it was a bad choice? :lol:

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2 hours ago, TauntonBlizzard2013 said:

So it was a bad choice? :lol:

they grow tall and fast, which means they have skinny trunks. while they are young, they will tip over with the slightest wind. Then when they get big and tall, they die at the root ball. Which means there is nothing in the ground to hold them up. poplars suck

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2 hours ago, TauntonBlizzard2013 said:

So it was a bad choice? :lol:

What about something with some showy flowers in the spring? Like a redbud or dogwood?

A tulip tree grown in a more open space would probably get a lot more wide/full than you experience in the forest where all of the trees are trying to outrace the others to light. Those will put out beautiful flowers after a decade or so of age. They have unique beautiful leaves too.

Is there any particular look you were going for? 

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1 hour ago, dendrite said:

What about something with some showy flowers in the spring? Like a redbud or dogwood?

A tulip tree grown in a more open space would probably get a lot more wide/full than you experience in the forest where all of the trees are trying to outrace the others to light. Those will put out beautiful flowers after a decade or so of age. They have unique beautiful leaves too.

Is there any particular look you were going for? 

I’m just trying to get some taller growing specimens. My yard isn’t huge. I planted an Armstrong maple early this year.

Going for something tall and columnar.

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11 hours ago, TauntonBlizzard2013 said:

I’m just trying to get some taller growing specimens. My yard isn’t huge. I planted an Armstrong maple early this year.

Going for something tall and columnar.

I second dendrite's recommendation.  Tulip trees are fast growing, have pretty spring flowers and when open-grown will have an attractive roundish crown.  Seeds are a bit messy but no worse than most trees.  They're surprisingly hardy - there's one in Farmington a block from Main Street that's 90+ feet tall and over 40" diameter, has a frost crack but weathered the town's coldest morning on record, -39 on Jan 20, 1994.  The town is about 2° latitude north of tulip tree's natural range.
(Tree trivia:  Tulip poplar vies with white pine and sycamore as the tallest eastern tree.  Prior to the uncut forest, each of those 3 had specimens in the 180-200 range.)

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3 hours ago, tamarack said:

I second dendrite's recommendation.  Tulip trees are fast growing, have pretty spring flowers and when open-grown will have an attractive roundish crown.  Seeds are a bit messy but no worse than most trees.  They're surprisingly hardy - there's one in Farmington a block from Main Street that's 90+ feet tall and over 40" diameter, has a frost crack but weathered the town's coldest morning on record, -39 on Jan 20, 1994.  The town is about 2° latitude north of tulip tree's natural range.
(Tree trivia:  Tulip poplar vies with white pine and sycamore as the tallest eastern tree.  Prior to the uncut forest, each of those 3 had specimens in the 180-200 range.)

So even though tulip poplar is a poplar it’s still a good plant? 
 

And those are some pretty impressive heights 

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19 minutes ago, TauntonBlizzard2013 said:

So even though tulip poplar is a poplar it’s still a good plant? 
 

And those are some pretty impressive heights 

Though it's called a poplar, it's not in the genus Populus, which includes aspens, cottonwood, Lombardy poplars and other similar species.  The tulip poplar (also tuliptree) genus is Liriodendron, so it's unrelated to the "real" poplars.

As for heights, where I grew up in NNJ there were forest-grown tuliptrees 120 feet tall or more with no branches below 50 feet.  However, the one my grandfather planted at their summer place sometime 1935-40 was about 60 feet tall when I last saw it (mid '60s) with 15-20 feet of bare trunk topped by a full ovoid crown.  Beautiful specimen.

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42 minutes ago, tamarack said:

If it's just a 5-foot whip, that's grossly overpriced.  If it's 2" caliper, that's quite reasonable, even in late August.

I bought all my fruit trees at the end of the summer for a discount, they're all doing well but for some reason I didn't get peaches this year, first year I don't. Usually, I get more than we could eat.

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2 hours ago, dendrite said:

Most of the orchards up here lost their entire apple crop from the May hard freeze. Sucks.

Somehow most of our apple blossoms survived the 25° morning.  Having totally lost blossoms (more than once) from late frosts in the past, I was cheered greatly when we returned 5 days later from a family reunion in Lancaster, PA.

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Our apple trees are loaded with apples.  Fortunately, because we are at a higher elevation the May freeze was not as bad as down below.  Originally in 1907 the owner of our house planted about 40 apple trees.  Most are now gone but a few still survive including this one near a surface well.  Over the past 5 years we have planted about 20 more apple trees and now some are bearing fruit.  The problem is that there are more bears now than the past 75 years and they keep destroying the young trees.

apple tree.jpg

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Meteorological summer is about over.   Our lawns enjoyed the rain.  We have had to do very little watering.  This picture is of the back of the house.  We are trying to save our Ash tree from the Ash Borer and have had it treated the past couple of years.  I'm sure it is a loosing battle after we are dead and gone.  In the meantime we planted a Eastern Redbud ( I think) that is on the left of this picture.  We also planted a oak tree (not in picture) that is just off to the right.  That will be the shade tree in future years if the Ash does not survive.  That Ash is now getting so big that it may interfere a bit with my anemometer during NW wind events.

backyard.jpg

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