If you have a mature American chestnut nearby, you are pretty lucky! The Chinese chestnut is apparently self fertile...we had a solo tree that produced plentiful fruit with no pollation source nearby. It is possible that the seedlings are displaying juvenile foliage and will produce more typical leaves in the future. Softer and less shiny leaves are more typical of C. americana though.
Yep. Camellia sinesis...likely a Korean clone...those being the hardiest. Arnold Arboretum is one of the places where people are breeding hardier (flowering) camellias for marinal areas like Boston.
Arnold Arboretum is where Harvard botanists have been planting specimens they've collected, or cultured from cuttings, etc., for decades--it's a Boston park, and one time that I went there, a mounted policeman came out of the brush as I was entering the park, and no joke, the horse saw me raise my camcorder and point it, and the horse-posed-, and held the pose until I lowered the camcorder! The police officer didn't seem to be giving the horse any direction, the horse did the posing and dropping the pose, apparently of its own volition! Harvard leases the park for use as a botanical garden for something like $1 a year, on a very long-term lease.
The young chestnut trees are at least two or three years old. Rabbits love to chomp through them in winter...
I have noticed that the leaves on the Chinese chestnut tree that are on old interior branches, don't have the waxy shiny dark greenness of the rest of the leaves on the tree. The pollination of the tree isn't high--I get maybe 100 nuts a year from it, with most of the burrs not developing actual nuts as opposed to shells that don't have nuts in them. During pollination season the stamen and pistils get covered in bees and other pollinating insects.
I know that years ago there had been a mature American chestnut tree in the center of town, which was cut down as part of a strip mall that was put in, and the center of town is about a mile and a half away.
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Date: 2005-10-24 04:46 pm (UTC)Yep. Camellia sinesis...likely a Korean clone...those being the hardiest. Arnold Arboretum is one of the places where people are breeding hardier (flowering) camellias for marinal areas like Boston.
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Date: 2005-10-24 05:31 pm (UTC)The young chestnut trees are at least two or three years old. Rabbits love to chomp through them in winter...
I have noticed that the leaves on the Chinese chestnut tree that are on old interior branches, don't have the waxy shiny dark greenness of the rest of the leaves on the tree. The pollination of the tree isn't high--I get maybe 100 nuts a year from it, with most of the burrs not developing actual nuts as opposed to shells that don't have nuts in them. During pollination season the stamen and pistils get covered in bees and other pollinating insects.
I know that years ago there had been a mature American chestnut tree in the center of town, which was cut down as part of a strip mall that was put in, and the center of town is about a mile and a half away.