Returned
5919
results. Page
232
of
592.
(White Ash)
White ash selection ‘Rosehill' has wide-angle branching, broadly oval crown and fine foliage that becomes multi-colored in autumn. This seedless selection was developed and introduced by American Garden Cole of Circleville, Ohio in the early 1980s.
The classic North American shade tree, white ash, is a large beautiful tree with a broad oval canopy, straight sturdy trunk and pretty foliage. It is a hard-wooded but fast growing species that naturally exists in hilly forests from Texas to the...
Michael Charters, www.calflora.net
(California Ash, Foothill Ash, Two-petaled Ash)
Steadfast through the long western dry season, foothill ash is distributed from the Oregon border to Mexico where it’s most commonly found along the foothills of the Sierra Nevadas and coastal ranges. It is a deciduous shrub or small, multi-trunked tree that loses its leaves in summer when the heat and drought are most intense. Its bark is gray-brown and develops scaly fissures; young stems are four-sided and become rounded as they age.
New foliage emerges with the onset of rain in early winter....
Jesse Saylor
(European Ash)
This stately, oval-headed, deciduous tree from Europe and Southwest Asia offers good shade in summer, and is also valued as a timber tree. Its glossy, dark green, pinnate leaves have 9 to 13 lance-shaped leaflets with lighter undersides and slightly fuzzy midribs. In autumn the foliage turns a weak yellow, but may simply drop off while still green in warmer regions. Inconspicuous flowers in spring give rise to winged seeds that mature from light green to pale brown. The black winter buds contrast...
James H. Schutte
(European Ash)
This stately, oval-headed, deciduous tree from Europe and Southwest Asia offers good shade in summer, and is also valued as a timber tree. Its glossy, dark green, pinnate leaves have 9 to 13 lance-shaped leaflets with lighter undersides and slightly fuzzy midribs. In autumn the foliage turns a weak yellow, but may simply drop off while still green in warmer regions. Inconspicuous flowers in spring give rise to winged seeds that mature from light green to pale brown. The black winter buds contrast...
Jesse Saylor
(European Ash)
An antique (pre-1725), weeping form of a stately deciduous tree from Europe and Southwest Asia, 'Pendula' rapidly forms a broad hummock of cascading branches. It lacks a "leader" and is typically grafted on upright understock. Its glossy, dark green, pinnate leaves have 9 to 13 lance-shaped leaflets with lighter undersides and slightly fuzzy midribs. In autumn the foliage turns a weak yellow, but may simply drop off while still green in warmer regions. Inconspicuous flowers in spring give rise to...
James H. Schutte
(Oregon Ash)
Fast growing when young, the tall, narrow shape of the Oregon ash is not an especially ornamental shade tree. The American Northwest's only native ash species, its range is from Washington's Puget Sound southward to the Sierra Nevada and Great Valley of central California. It grows alongside woodland streams. The yellow fall foliage is one pretty attribute, as is the furrowed grayish brown bark that is ridged in white.
The compound leaves emerge light green and fuzzy in spring. They have seven...
(Texas Ash)
The classic North American shade tree, white ash, is a large beautiful tree with a broad canopy, upright sturdy trunk and pretty foliage. It is a hard-wooded but fast growing species that exists in upland forests from Texas to the farthest northeastern reaches of Canada. It is valuable for lumber which is used to make furniture, baseball bats and flooring.
This upright tree develops an evenly-branched oval or rounded crown. The leaves are compound and have five to nine deep green oval leaflets....