Steve, 

Thanks. That makes sense. 


Bob 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Steve Galehouse" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Friday, November 6, 2009 11:24:07 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Two nice Pin Oaks, Bay Village, Ohio 

Bob- 

I've seen similar individuals in my area---my guess would be X Quercus jackiana 
, a white/swamp white hybrid. I've seem many individual oaks that appear 
intermediate between two species, both in the white oak and red oak groups. 

Steve 


On Fri, Nov 6, 2009 at 8:42 PM, < [email protected] > wrote: 





Steve, 

Splendid pictures of attractive pin oaks. Pins are very common in the 
Connecticut River Valley. I see many that are between 8 and 11 feet in girth 
and 85 to 105 feet tall. An occasional pin oak reaches to 13 to 14 feet around. 
An equally small population reaches to 110 feet in height. The pin oak seemed 
to have been a preferred shade tree along the streets of many northeastern 
cities. 


Today I photographed an oak in Look Park. The first three attached images show 
the trunk. The last two images show leaves from the same tree. What are the 
choices? The tree actually looks like a combination of swamp white oak, swamp 
chestnut oak, bur oak, and white oak. The tree looks to be fairly old. It grows 
close to a native woodland, but appears to be planted. 


Bob 






----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Steve Galehouse" < [email protected] > 
To: "ENTS" < [email protected] > 
Sent: Friday, November 6, 2009 6:23:07 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [ENTS] Two nice Pin Oaks, Bay Village, Ohio 

ENTS- 

Pin oaks are the most common oak in my area, but they seem to be relatively 
uncommon in much of the East. For those that only know the tree as a young, 
rigidly pyramidal landscape specimen, I thought I would show some pics of how 
they mature. The tree on the left is 101' x 12'7'', the right one is 89' x 
13'3''. Lake Erie visible in baackground. 

Steve 









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