✅White Shield Osage Orange

General Info

  • Latin Name - Maclura pomifera ‘White Shield’
  • Native Range - Arkansas to Oklahoma and Texas
  • Growth Rate - Fast
  • Mature Height - 30–40’
  • Mature Spread - 30–40’

Arborist Thoughts

  • Named after the White Shield creek in Oklahoma near where the original tree was discovered, this cultivated variety of Osage Orange is both thornless and fruitless. 
  • Dark green glossy foliage looks as good at the end of the growing season as it did when leaves first emerged in Spring.  No real fall color or noticeable flowers
  • Not the best tree for ornamental appeal but is fast growing in youth, tough, and adaptable to most sites.
  • Excellent tree for a street tree or use in institutional or unmanaged sites being both drought tolerant and pest/disease resistant

✅Overcup Oak

General Info

  • Latin Name - Quercus lyrata
  • Native Range - New Jersey to Florida, west to Missouri and Texas
  • Growth Rate - Medium, Fast in youth
  • Mature Height - 40–60’
  • Mature Spread - 40–60’

Arborist Thoughts

  • An excellent oak for use in challenging sites.  Overcup oak is a bottomlands species in its native habitat and adapts well to poor quality soils, poorly drained sites and restricted root zones.
  • Overcup oak transplants well and is faster growing than most other oaks in the white oak group.
  • Great specimen tree or a street tree for areas where overhead utilities are not an issue.

✅Lacebark Pine

General Info

  • Latin Name - Pinus bungeana
  • Native Range - China
  • Growth Rate - Slow
  • Mature Height - 30–50’
  • Mature Spread - 20–30

Arborist Thoughts

  • The Lacebark Pine is one of the most beautiful and interesting pines because of its attractive exfoliating bark at maturity.  The bark is initially green but will begin to flake off revealing, brown, white and silver areas once stems reach 1.5 – 2 inches in diameter.
  • Hardy and adaptable to high pH soils and makes an excellent specimen tree when planted in a location where the bark is visible
  • Could also be used for screening as an alternative to other commonly used evergreens

 

✅Ginkgo

General Info

  • Latin Name - Ginkgo biloba
  • Native Range - Eastern China
  • Growth Rate - Slow to Medium
  • Mature Height - 50–80’
  • Mature Spread - 30–50’

Arborist Thoughts

  • An excellent and incredibly hardy shade tree that has stood the test of time – Ginkgo goes as far back as the dinosaurs (270 million years ago).
  • Ginkgo has no known disease problems or insect predation and can grow well in a wide range of soil types and urban conditions including confined spaces.
  • Ginkgo has unique, fan shaped leaves and stunning Golden-yellow Autumn color making it one of the most distinct and beautiful of all trees during the Fall season.
  • Ginkgo trees can be male or female and the fruit of the female tree is considered messy and smells unpleasant.   Several male cultivated varieties of Ginkgo are available such as ‘Saratoga,’ ‘Princeton Sentry,’ and ‘Autumn Gold.’ 

 

✅Kousa Dogwood

General Info

  • Latin Name - Cornus kousa
  • Native Range - Japan, Korea, China
  • Growth Rate - Slow to Medium
  • Mature Height - 20–30’
  • Mature Spread: 20–30’

Arborist Thoughts

  • Kousa dogwood is a great ornamental tree for multi-seasonal interest.  Beautiful white flowers (technically bracts in late Spring, attractive exfoliating bark, showy red fruit edible fruit and reliable red Fall color in the foliage.

  • Kousa dogwood is more sun tolerant, heat tolerant, and drought tolerant than our native dogwood and  less susceptible to fungal diseases like anthracnose and powdery mildew.

✅Korean Evodia

General Info

  • Latin Name - Evodia daniellii
  • Native Range - Northern China, Korea
  • Growth Rate - Medium to Fast
  • Mature Height - 25–35’
  • Mature Spread - 25–35’

Arborist Thoughts

  • This small to medium-sized tree could make a great front yard specimen in a smaller landscape or be used well as a street tree where growing height is limited.

  • Korean evodia flowers late June – early August with attractive white flowers that provide quite a show when few other woody plants are in flower.  White flowers lead to attractive shiny red and black fruit.  Also, a great source of nectar for honeybees and other pollinators.

  • Korean evodia has no significant disease or insect problems and is adaptable to most soil types and soil pH.

 

 

✅Japanese Zelkova

General Info

  • Latin Name - Zelkova serrata
  • Native Range - Japan, Korea, Taiwan
  • Growth Rate - Medium, Fast in youth
  • Mature Height - 50–80’
  • Mature Spread - 40–50’

Arborist Thoughts

  • Another great urban tolerant tree that deserves more consideration in the landscape or as a street tree.
  • Japanese zelkova has an upright vase shaped habit, attractive exfoliating bark at maturity and stunning apricot to red fall color.

  • Would make a great alternative to Red maple for folks seeing a tree with reliable Fall color. 

 

✅Dawn Redwood

General Info

  • Latin Name - Metasequoia glyptostroboides
  • Native Range - Central China
  • Growth Rate - Fast
  • Mature Height - 70–100’
  • Mature Spread - 5–30’

Arborist Thoughts

  • Thought to be extinct until discovered in China in the 1940s, Dawn Redwood is a great tree for a site that can handle some height.

  • Very fast growing, no serious disease or insect problems and can survive in a wide range of soil types and climates.

  • Dawn redwood is deciduous conifer so needles do fall of in the Fall but not before turning a nice coppery orange color.

  • A great tree to consider for folks looking to establish shade or a large screen in a short amount of time. 

✅Concolor Fir

General Info

  • Latin Name - Abies concolor
  • Native Range - Colorado to Southern California and parts of New Mexico
  • Growth Rate - Slow to Medium
  • Mature Height - 30–50’
  • Mature Spread - 15–30’

Arborist Thoughts

  • This magnificent evergreen deserves more use in the Midwest landscape. 
  • Needles have a beautiful silvery blue color and citrusy fragrance.

  • Concolor Fir is drought tolerant, urban tolerant/adaptable, has little insect or pest problems and is a narrower tree than other large evergreens making it better suited for smaller landscape sites.

  • Would make an excellent alternative to Blue Spruce in the landscape.

✅Chinkapin Oak

General Info

  • Latin Name - Quercus muehlenbergii
  • Native Range - Maine to Virginia, west to Minnesota, Nebraska and parts of Texas
  • Growth Rate - Medium
  • Mature Height - 50–60’
  • Mature Spread - 50–60’

Arborist Thoughts

  • Strong drought tolerant Ohio native with clean lustrous dark green foliage and nice pyramidal habit.

  • Important tree for wildlife producing sweet and nutritious acorns.   Good tree for wildlife habitat also.

  • More adaptable to high pH soils and urban landscapes than oaks in the Red oak group (pin oak, Northern Red oak, Shingle oak, etc).

  • Great long-lived specimen for an area that can accommodate a larger tree.

🚫Callery Pear

Callery Pear Shape

>>DO NOT PLANT<<

General Info

  • Latin Name - Pyrus calleryana
  • Native Range - China and Korea
  • Growth Rate - Fast
  • Mature Height - 40–60’
  • Mature Spread - 25–40’ 

Arborist Thoughts

  • Cherished for its white flowering show in the Spring but dreaded for its poor structure, weak stem attachment and susceptibility to fireblight (a lethal bacterial disease) and lecanium scale (a challenging insect pest to manage).
  • This tree has reached epidemic proportions through over planting and by the high volume of escaped seedlings along highways, abandoned fields and unmanaged areas. 

  • Ohio added Callery pear to the Invasive species list in 2016.

  • One of the most likely tree species to fail under wind or ice load.

  • DO NOT PLANT

✅Black Tupelo

General Info

  • Latin Name - Nyssa sylvatica
  • Native Range - Ontario, Maine, Michigan to Florida and parts of Texas
  • Growth Rate - Slow to Medium
  • Mature Height - 40–60’
  • Mature Spread - 25–35’

Arborist Thoughts

  • One of our most beautiful native trees, Black Tupelo (sometimes called Black Gum) can be used as a landscape specimen tree or street tree and is one of the best and most reliable trees for attractive red Fall color.

  • Also, a good tree for wildlife producing a small bluish fruit edible to birds and mammals.  Several cultivated varieties have been introduced for superior Fall color, ie ‘Red Rage,’ ‘Wildfire,’ ‘Miss Scarlet.’Excellent choice for an area where a medium sized tree is sought

  • No significant disease or insect problems.

 

✅Purple Robe Black Locust

General Info

  • Latin Name - Robinia pseudoacacia ‘Purple Robe’
  • Native Range - Pennsylvania to Georgia, West to Iowa, Missouri and Oklahoma
  • Growth Rate - Fast
  • Mature Height - 30–50’
  • Mature Spread - 20–35’

Arborist Thoughts

  • One of the prettiest forms of Black Locust with dark pink to purple flowers that resemble wisteria.
  • This fast-growing, urban tolerant tree is easy to grow and an excellent choice for challenging sites.
  • Good tree where dappled shade is desired

 

✅Valley Forge American Elm

General Info

  • Latin Name - Ulmus americana ‘ Valley Forge’
  • Native Range - Northern Canada to Florida west to the Rocky Mountains.
  • Growth Rate - Medium to Fast
  • Mature Height - 60–80’
  • Mature Spread - 30–50’

Arborist Thoughts

  • tree of great historical significance, American Elm once lined the streets of the Midwest and New England before the accidental introduction of Dutch Elm Disease.   Much breeding and selection work has been done to develop Dutch Elm Disease resistant cultivated varieties and reintroduce the American Elm into our landscapes and streets.   ‘Valley Forge’ is reported to have the highest tolerance to the Dutch Elm disease.  Other resistant cultivars to consider are ‘Princeton’ and ‘Jefferson.’
  • American Elm is an urban tolerant, adaptable, easy to grow tree with nice fall color.   If you are looking for a fast-growing shade tree for your landscape, this is one to consider.

Did You Know Construction Can Kill Trees?

We see it all the time: trees surrounding a newly built home dying as a result of soil compaction and mechanical damage from heavy machinery, as well as change in the native grade affecting soil depth and water flow. A tree preservation plan is needed prior to construction which prioritizes your woody landscape as an important part of your construction project. With a Pre-Construction Tree Preservation Consultation from Arbor Answers, our experts will build a custom plan for your construction site to encourage the trees to thrive following the completion of the project. 

Ask an Arborist: When is the best time of year to get trees trimmed?

The dormant season is a great time of year to prune your trees, Sandra. This is basically from October through May. In the dormant season, the leaves are off so it is easier to see structural defects within the canopy of your tree. It is also a time of year when there are fewer insect and disease issues that sometimes or attracted to fresh pruning wounds. Sometimes customers have concerns about our cruise being able to identify dead limbs when there are no leaves. This is done by looking closely at the bark and if needed, the color of the cambium layer with a small scratch on the bark of each branch. Long story short: Now is a great time to trim your trees!

-Joe Russell, Russell Tree Experts

Poplar Weevil

On Monday, June 11th, TJ shared some leaf samples he had collected in the field. These leaves were marked with feeding damage from a small black insect he also had collected to show us. I had never seen or heard of this critter before that day, but TJ's sharing could not have been more timely. Since then I have had the opportunity to see evidence of plant damage by the Yellow Poplar Weevil from Ostrander to New Albany.

Imprelis damage on pines and spruces

I’ve recently responded to several clients who needed an ISA Certified Arborist to evaluate their trees for Imprelis damage.  In cases like this, it is easy to walk up to a tree such as a  White Pine or a spruce, see the familiar symptoms of Imprelis damage from a distance and make the conclusion that Imprelis was the culprit causing the dead, curled stems at the top of the canopy.  

This is a prime example of having to set aside preconceived ideas about what may be wrong with a tree.  First, the thought of Imprelis has been introduced by the client, which tells me that Imprelis has been in use at the property.  Second, the tree in question is a tree known to be susceptible to Imprelis damage. Third, as I approach the tree the symptoms look like Imprelis.  As an arborist, I have to slow down, set aside the preconceptions, and look closely at the tree, as White Pine Weevil (WPW) is another common problem to pines and spruces that causes symptoms somewhat similar to those caused by Imprelis.

During the past two weeks, I have had the above scenario play out in 3-4 instances, enough times that I thought it worthwhile to write about.  Though the symptoms and the host trees are similar, there are some differences worth pointing out:

  1. With Imprelis damage, the affected tips are usually spread throughout the canopy. With WPW usually only one stem (sometimes more) will be affected, and this will almost always be the top stem in the tree. However, I have seen trees lightly damaged by Imprelis that showed symptoms on only one or two stems, and those were in the top of the tree as well.

  2. Imprelis typically causes unnatural swelling of buds and stems. Not so with WPW.

  3. WPW can cause a distinctive sap flow which can be seen from the ground if present.

  4. If the culprit is WPW, careful inspection will reveal exit holes coming from the damaged stem of the tree. If it is possible to prune the dead tip out to make a close inspection, signs of WPW will be unmistakable if that is the culprit.

I have seen one spruce with light Imprelis damage that also  had WPW.  This needed to be taken into account so both problems could be addressed in the diagnosis.

Moral of the story?  Approach every tree, every client, every person, with a blank slate.  It is easy to look at trees and people with preconceived notions getting in the way of an accurate and fair appraisal, and people, like trees, do not respond well to incorrect treatment.

Your friendly neighborhood arborist, 

 José F.

How to Water Your Trees

How do I water my new trees?

Believe it or not, there is more to watering a tree than simply spraying it with a hose once in a while.  Properly watering a tree will ensure that the tree establishes well at its new location, developing strong, deep roots that will sustain it through periods of drought as it matures.  Please note that this article will not deal with how to properly plant a tree, although how the tree is planted does influence how water enters into the root zone.  

First of all, you need to know what type of soil you have.  In central Ohio, heavy clay soils are most common, and almost guaranteed if you live in a newer housing development where the soil structure is far from normal due to common construction practices.  If you happen to have a sandier soil than commonly found in Ohio, you will need to adjust your watering accordingly.