|
Euonymus europaeus - European Spindle Tree |
Euonymus europaeus commonly known as Spindle Tree is native
to Europe and Western Asia. This is small but interesting and appears as a shrubs particularly on the chalk downs
and locally on lime-rich soils. It is scarcely noticed before autumn, when the
displays of its pretty fuchsia-pink seed-pods are conspicuous, accompanied by a
delightful show of leaf color, the green leaves changing to russet-red hues
before they fall.
The young twigs are green (in autumn a conspicuous component
of an otherwise brown hedgerow) and after the first year are four-angled, later
developing pale brown cork ribs along the angles of the square, eventually they
grow quite round. The winter buds are in opposite pairs. The leaves very from
oval to lance-shaped, with a finely toothed margin and a pointed tip. From a
shining blue-mid-green (paler on the under-side) they fade in autumn to yellow,
russet and crimson.
|
Euonymus europaeus - Spindle Tree |
The small greenish-white flowers are borne in June in loose
cluster in the leaf axils. The trees are often either male or female thought
flowers including both sexes do occur on the same tree. The female flower
produces a four-lobed seed-pod which is pale green at first, but changes to a
vivid pink by October. Within a month or two the seed-pod splist open to expose the four bright orange
pulpy coats ( and aril) which each enclose a hard white seed within a pink
seed-coat. The seeds are poisonous.
The bark is smooth, greenish at first, later becoming grey
to pale brown. The hardness, smoothness and toughness of the whitish wood led
to its early use for the spindles used for spinning wool by hand – explaining
the tree’s name. The wood also yields a fine charcoal for artists’ use.
1 comment:
Great to run across this info! I found a small tree just like this here in Kansas! I'm glad to be able to ID it! Thanks for the info :)
Danielle
Post a Comment