urbpan: (dandelion)
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I haven't dumped the pics from one of my since January. Here are some winter shots. First, Exidia recisa, one of the few mushrooms of winter, here shown slightly frozen.

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Some moss, carefully manicured in the cracks between some sidewalk slabs.

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One of the urban field markings of European beech is that it usually bears some graffiti. Usually it's initials carved in the smooth bark, so this is a nice variant.

Big Beech

Feb. 8th, 2014 07:10 pm
urbpan: (dandelion)
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My dad visited today, and among other places, we visited the Longwood Mall. This is a linear park studded with dozens of specimens of European beech trees. This species (Fagus sylvatica) is cultivated into many different ornamental varieties, and several are represented here.

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This individual is one of a few that is heroic in scale--by itself it would be the most impressive tree in a given town but Brookline has literally dozens of them, survivors from an original planting of more than 10,000.
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Forest Hills Cemetery in Boston is an active and historic burying ground, and also a sculpture park. These tiny cement houses were new to us, but I bet they've been there for a while. The sculptures used to have plaques identifying them and their artists, but they seem to be gone.

Read more... )
urbpan: (cold)

Yesterday we went to the Forest Hills Cemetery.
+/- 20 pictures )
urbpan: (family portrait)


Afternoon nap and movie companions. we went for a walk, too )
On this day in 365 Urban Species: Carpetweed and spurge, two plants that seem made for sprouting in sidewalks.
urbpan: (Me and Charlie in the Arnold Arboretum)
I didn't take too many pictures on last week's Urban Nature Walk at the Arnold Arboretum. Maybe that's because I was too busy yakkin'. Here are two.


This giant European Beech demands climbing and (for some people apparently) incising with graffiti.


My dad and Justin talking in the pines. Something about this walk made people spread out--there were only eight of us, but we were all over the place. I actually had to call one section of the group on my cell phone to get us back together. Beautiful place, though!

See Alexis' pictures here.
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European Beech in the Riverway, Boston, February 2006.

Urban species#037: European beech Fagus sylvtica

While The Urban Tree Book says the beech is "usually an isolated specimen in town," in the town of Brookline and the areas in Boston that border it, there are dozens. In the mid 1800's local notable David Sears ordered over 5000 beeches from a Liverpool company. Most are gathered in a square called Longwood Mall, often called the largest grove of European beeches in North America (for whatever that's worth).
views of the Longwood Mall )

There are also several specimens dating from the same time on nearby streets in Brookline, as well as lining the Riverway (on the Boston side) and in the Mount Auburn Cemetery.

Brookline )

It's easy to see the appeal of the European beech. It's a magnificent spreading tree nearly 100 feet tall at maturity, whose branches bend to reach the ground, creating a shady enclosed space, well-suited to picnics. Depending on what the nursery specified, the foliage can be purple, copper, or rich green. The bark is cool, smooth, and gray, and when the tree is old is bears distinguished folds and wrinkles, like the enormous leg of a vegetable elephant.
vegetable elephant?! )
The bark is an irresistible temptation to vandals, whose decades-old scarifications can be seen smeared and elevated by the passing years. One wishes that lovers felt compelled to scratch a heart into the thin skin of a beech tree, that at least they would leave a date so that their disfigurements had historical value.
loves come and go, the tree continues to grow )

The native North American beech is Fagus grandifola, distinguished by lighter, less-wrinkled bark, and an ability to grow in warmer climates than the European species. American beech is more prone to suckering, a form of vegetative reproduction wherein new saplings sprout from the roots of the parent tree. This leads to forested areas where American beech trees thickly cluster into miniature groves.

miniature urban grove )

Beech trees are ecologically important on the east coast of North America. Beech nuts provide autumn and winter food for a vast variety of birds and mammals, including humans. European beech may have been introduced the British islands by prehistoric humans carrying beech nuts.

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