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scott(remove_to_reply)
06-20-2005, 07:09 PM
This tree is growing in the yard of a friend. The original owner of his
home was an exotic tree collector. He has many unusual specimens in the
yard. No one seems to know what type of tree this one is. It is
growing in south western New Jersey where it is not unusual for winter
temperatures to drop below 0 on really cold winter nights. The thee is
about 20 feet tall and is probably 25 years old. It is growing below a
canopy of very tall oak trees.

http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/1.jpg
http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/2.jpg
http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/3.jpg

puddles
06-20-2005, 07:09 PM
"scott(remove_to_reply)" <"scott(remove_to_reply)"@datajugglers.com> wrote
in message news:0tzte.58992$JA.6009@fe01.news.easynews.com...
> This tree is growing in the yard of a friend. The original owner of his
> home was an exotic tree collector. He has many unusual specimens in the
> yard. No one seems to know what type of tree this one is. It is
> growing in south western New Jersey where it is not unusual for winter
> temperatures to drop below 0 on really cold winter nights. The thee is
> about 20 feet tall and is probably 25 years old. It is growing below a
> canopy of very tall oak trees.
>
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/1.jpg
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/2.jpg
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/3.jpg


Definitely don't want to 'rake up the leaves' from that tree!

Stubby
06-20-2005, 07:09 PM
scott(remove_to_reply) wrote:

> This tree is growing in the yard of a friend. The original owner of his
> home was an exotic tree collector. He has many unusual specimens in the
> yard. No one seems to know what type of tree this one is. It is
> growing in south western New Jersey where it is not unusual for winter
> temperatures to drop below 0 on really cold winter nights. The thee is
> about 20 feet tall and is probably 25 years old. It is growing below a
> canopy of very tall oak trees.
>
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/1.jpg
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/2.jpg
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/3.jpg

Catalpa?

Helen
06-20-2005, 07:09 PM
Lots of BIG leaves... show us the bark....



"scott(remove_to_reply)" <"scott(remove_to_reply)"@datajugglers.com> wrote
in message news:0tzte.58992$JA.6009@fe01.news.easynews.com...
> This tree is growing in the yard of a friend. The original owner of his
> home was an exotic tree collector. He has many unusual specimens in the
> yard. No one seems to know what type of tree this one is. It is
> growing in south western New Jersey where it is not unusual for winter
> temperatures to drop below 0 on really cold winter nights. The thee is
> about 20 feet tall and is probably 25 years old. It is growing below a
> canopy of very tall oak trees.
>
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/1.jpg
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/2.jpg
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/3.jpg

G Henslee
06-21-2005, 12:02 AM
scott(remove_to_reply) wrote:
> This tree is growing in the yard of a friend. The original owner of his
> home was an exotic tree collector. He has many unusual specimens in the
> yard. No one seems to know what type of tree this one is. It is
> growing in south western New Jersey where it is not unusual for winter
> temperatures to drop below 0 on really cold winter nights. The thee is
> about 20 feet tall and is probably 25 years old. It is growing below a
> canopy of very tall oak trees.
>
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/1.jpg
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/2.jpg
> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/3.jpg

Dunno, but it seems to excite you greatly.

Ph47f3
06-23-2005, 07:14 PM
Definitely NOT a catalpa tree. The leaves are too large and the wrong shape.
I think its some hardy tropical species.

Ben

Stubby wrote:
> scott(remove_to_reply) wrote:
>
>> This tree is growing in the yard of a friend. The original owner of
>> his home was an exotic tree collector. He has many unusual specimens
>> in the yard. No one seems to know what type of tree this one is. It
>> is growing in south western New Jersey where it is not unusual for
>> winter temperatures to drop below 0 on really cold winter nights. The
>> thee is about 20 feet tall and is probably 25 years old. It is
>> growing below a canopy of very tall oak trees.
>>
>> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/1.jpg
>> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/2.jpg
>> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/3.jpg
>
>
> Catalpa?

JoeMorgan@here.now
06-24-2005, 07:14 PM
It's an Umbrella Magnolia. For sure.


On Thu, 23 Jun 2005 07:31:36 -0500, Ph47f3
<ph47f3@obscurus-inquisitus.com> wrote:

>Definitely NOT a catalpa tree. The leaves are too large and the wrong shape.
>I think its some hardy tropical species.
>
>Ben
>
>Stubby wrote:
>> scott(remove_to_reply) wrote:
>>
>>> This tree is growing in the yard of a friend. The original owner of
>>> his home was an exotic tree collector. He has many unusual specimens
>>> in the yard. No one seems to know what type of tree this one is. It
>>> is growing in south western New Jersey where it is not unusual for
>>> winter temperatures to drop below 0 on really cold winter nights. The
>>> thee is about 20 feet tall and is probably 25 years old. It is
>>> growing below a canopy of very tall oak trees.
>>>
>>> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/1.jpg
>>> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/2.jpg
>>> http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/3.jpg
>>
>>
>> Catalpa?

scott(remove_to_reply)
06-24-2005, 07:14 PM
Joe,

You are absolutely right. I have looked at some pictures on the net and
they all look exactly like the tree.

Thanks!



JoeMorgan@here.now wrote:
> It's an Umbrella Magnolia. For sure.
>
>
> On Thu, 23 Jun 2005 07:31:36 -0500, Ph47f3
> <ph47f3@obscurus-inquisitus.com> wrote:
>
>
>>Definitely NOT a catalpa tree. The leaves are too large and the wrong shape.
>>I think its some hardy tropical species.
>>
>>Ben
>>
>>Stubby wrote:
>>
>>>scott(remove_to_reply) wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>This tree is growing in the yard of a friend. The original owner of
>>>>his home was an exotic tree collector. He has many unusual specimens
>>>>in the yard. No one seems to know what type of tree this one is. It
>>>>is growing in south western New Jersey where it is not unusual for
>>>>winter temperatures to drop below 0 on really cold winter nights. The
>>>>thee is about 20 feet tall and is probably 25 years old. It is
>>>>growing below a canopy of very tall oak trees.
>>>>
>>>>http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/1.jpg
>>>>http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/2.jpg
>>>>http://www.deluciafamily.org/tree/3.jpg
>>>
>>>
>>>Catalpa?
>
>