Peter,

Your spelling is correct.  But this is an informal group.  If you correct every 
spelling error you will need to reply to every post.  It was not unclear what 
species I was writing about, so...

Ed

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Peter Aplin 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, March 21, 2009 10:13 PM
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: The Devil is in the details ...Arilia spinosa


  Hello....I don't want to be acting like an old school teacher, but spelling 
is key when using latin, for that is what correctly identifies what you are 
refering to...so Aralia spinosa is the Devils Walking Stick, not Arilia......
  Peter

  On 19-Mar-09, at 10:46 AM, Edward Frank wrote:


    Jenny,

    As uncomfortable as grabbing it may be for the hiker, Arilia spinosa is a 
native tree across much of eastern United States.  It isn't clear if it 
actually is native to NYC, or if that is just beyond its native range.  It was 
used in Victorian gardens as an ornamental, and the aromatic roots and fruit 
were used by settlers as home remedies...mainly for toothache.  I am curious 
how large of trees they are removing?  It certainly is not a highly thought of 
tree in any case.  The tallest specimen in our database is 36 feet, and the 
fattest is 53.4 inches GBH.  That is a pretty fat one, but I am sure there are 
many taller examples out there, we just don't measure that many of them.  The 
oldest one we have found was one Jess Riddle noted cut along a trail at just 32 
years old.  Some of these pioneer species seem to just die before growing very 
old.  I would be interested in ring counts from any larger or old specimens 
removed as part of the project.  I personally am curious about many of these 
unwanted and oft overlooked species. 

    Ed
    .

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "JennyNYC" <[email protected]>
    To: "ENTSTrees" <[email protected]>
    Sent: Thursday, March 19, 2009 9:17 AM
    Subject: [ENTS] Re: Hemlocks - HWA?

    The DEVIL is Aralia spinosa - Devil's Walking Stick. I joke a lot that
    we are removing the Devil and the Tree of Heaven (Ailanthus) from the
    Forest. Nobody really laughs though...I can't figure out if they don't
    get it or the joke is just getting really really old or it just wasn't
    that funny in the first place!









  

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