Photo-timeline:
Post-Set A unknown seedlings (PSAUS)

Scroll down for an overview (in reverse chronological order) of the progress of the post-Set A unknown seedling(s). Or go back to Photo-timelines home.


27 June 2009

post-Set A unknown seedling



18 May 2009

post-Set A unknown seedling



18 May 2009

post-Set A unknown seedling



20 Apr 2009

post-Set A unknown seedling



07 Apr 2009

post-Set A unknown seedling



27 Feb 2009

post-Set A unknown seedling



6 Oct 2008

post-Set A unknown seedling



4 Aug 2008

post-Set A unknown seedling



28 Apr 2008

post-Set A unknown seedlings



30 Mar 2008

post-Set A unknown seedlings



13 Mar 2008

post-Set A unknown seedlings



10 Feb 2008

post-Set A unknown seedlings



17 Dec 2007

post-Set A unknown seedlings


Photo-timelines home.








RECENT COMMENTS

Beautiful photos, especially the lonely oak ones... Took me while to work out the bark rubbing one though... initially I thought it was a snow clad trunk!

5 days ago by DL Corran

In Yorkshire at the moment the native alder's (Alnus glutinosa) male catkins are still closed and a striking purple. There are some other alders planted around Sheffield streets and car-parks that I think are Italian alders (Alnus cordata) - their male catkins are already open and yellow. I was going to say you should check the leaves of your trees in a guide until I remembered that there won't be any!

7 days ago by Ash

Happy festival! (which yet again I've missed!) I saw some great catkins today en masse on some trees in Central (just beside the doctors surgery). I'm not sure what trees they are (maybe alder?) but I have to go back tomorrow with my camera - they were so photogenic!

7 days ago by kitty

In the UK, you don't get many big chestnuts. Even in the south, they're not incredibly big. The chestnuts over here are only good for growing chestnut trees.

8 days ago by Reece

I can't say I've ever come across a chestnut around here with decent sized nuts. They've always been about the size of the ones in this post. Obviously Britain's climate is not conducive to the growth of large chestnuts, although there may be favourable microclimates around, as you mention on your blog. Then again, I've read that the trees grown abroad to produce edible nuts are special cultivars (selected to produce just one large nut per cupule); the chestnuts growing wild in the UK are probably uncultivated.

9 days ago by Ash




TODAY IS...

Set A - Day 1078

Set C - Day 364

Set C(r) - Day 302

Set D(b) - Day 161

Set D(c) - Day 151

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