Which types of deciduous trees: rowan? - Tips?

  • Erstellt am 2015-02-03 13:26:03

willWohnen

2015-02-03 13:26:03
  • #1
Hello,
what kind of trees do you have in the garden that have become particularly dear to you, and which types annoy you?

For example, someone told me they have a foreign oak species, and they don't know what to do with the leaves because they are not compostable. I wouldn't have thought of that.
Hawthorn is supposed to stink when it blooms?

I am thinking about a rowan, but maybe someone says the fruits fall for months and heavily dirty paths. But maybe the birds eat everything before it can fall?

Is it more pleasant when a tree loses all its leaves quickly within a few days (maple?) or when it carries the withered leaves through the winter (oak)?

So everything you have experienced with trees interests me.

Thanks + regards
 

nordanney

2015-02-03 13:49:01
  • #2
We have newly planted three amber trees with us. They have beautiful red leaves in the fall, which also stay on the tree for quite a long time. Looks great in the setting sun.
From our old house, we also took a few trees with us. Two old olive trees (already almost 40 cm in circumference at the base of the trunk) look great in a Mediterranean corner. However, I still have to plant them frost-proof this year (with root heating), but they keep their leaves in winter as well.
Next to them, we also have two about 12-15 years old slit horns. Whether the two survived the move (digging up and replanting) though? Let's see what the summer brings. They were/are also little trees our hearts are attached to, as they have grown wonderfully by now.
 

ypg

2015-02-03 14:10:01
  • #3


Are you confusing oak with beech now?

We have mixed evergreens with deciduous trees. For the autumn bed (and in terms of shape generally) a serviceberry is valuable.
In addition, we treated ourselves to a willow-leaved weeping pear (I hope that’s what it was) – the Nordic olive tree
 

willWohnen

2015-02-03 21:45:19
  • #4
Hello.
: Thanks for your experiences. I’m keeping my fingers crossed that the strap horns survive! Such a red autumn planting is really something beautiful.

: That’s how it is with the winter oak (sessile oak), but not with the summer oak (pedunculate oak). That’s why you can have seen it one way or the other outside.
I had to surf first after the weeping pear. What a pretty hanging, flowering little tree.
 

ypg

2015-02-03 21:53:40
  • #5


Was my combination of words put together correctly? Since it was already planted three quarters of a year ago, the name is quickly forgotten in everyday life. It was expensive ops:

Thanks for the oak info: for me it was always taboo because of the non-compostable leaves...

We also have more maples in all variations
 

willWohnen

2015-02-03 22:00:53
  • #6
: yes, you did it correctly. The comma placement in my sentence is strange. It is of course also beautiful how it blooms, not just how it hangs.

really, oak leaves are not compostable??? oh, that is a pity. That is the queen of trees. Although it is a bit crazy and only for the next generation, I had toyed a little with the idea of planting one.

Does the maple not always suddenly drop all its leaves at once? I knew one that was maybe bright yellow for 4-5 days, and within 2 more days it was completely bare.
 

Similar topics
13.09.2014Multi-family house: arrangement of residential units, trees, etc.35
18.04.2016Trees on desired plot, is felling allowed? Seeking advice10
10.03.2018Trees on the construction site, remove roots for soil work?11
26.05.2017Neighbor wants to plant a mountain maple47
03.06.20208 trees on the property between the power and telephone lines.31
21.09.2021Solar panel shading caused by neighbor's trees15
01.02.2022Who is responsible for the trees? Neighbor's fence behind the boundary10
17.09.2024Buy land in Potsdam with huge oaks?20

Oben