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Tilia × europaea – Lime – Linden |
The twigs are strongly zigzagged and reddish, dull crimson
in color. The winter buds ae tinged with red, and have only two visible scales
one much larger than the other. The 2-3 in long leaves have toothed margins,
are heart-shaped, usually unequal at the base, and are dull green on the upper underneath
– which underside is conspicuous when the foliage billows in the wind. Red or
pink bud-scales are often associated with the leaves. The foliage is sometimes
infested in midsummer with numerous tiny aphids, which exude sticky ‘honey-dew’.
The leaves turn yellow or golden in the early autumn.
The yellowish-green bi-sexual flowers are borne in June and
July (early summer) in clusters of four to ten on a long main stalk which also
carries a narrowly oblong papery bract. Each flower has five green sepals and
five greenish-white to yellow petals. The hard round downy seeds ripen in
October.
At first the bark is smooth and greyish-green, striped with
darker markings, but eventually becomes rough and fissured. It is fibrous and
tough, and when young this ‘bast’ can be used for tying bundles of woodland
produce. The wood is white smooth, even-grained and soft, much used in the
past, and still occasionally, by the wood sculptor, and for hat blocks and
piano keys. If felled, Lime copies vigorously. It tolerates lopping and
trimming. The tree is rarely planted in woodlands.
Lime Leaves |
Tilia × europaea Leaves in Autumn |
Lime Flowers |
Tilia × europaea Flowers |
Tilia × europaea Fruits |
Lime Fruits |
Lime Bud |
Tilia × europaea Trunk |
Lime Trunk |
Tilia × europaea – Lime Bark |
Lime in Autumn |
Tilia × europaea in Autumn |
Lime as Ornamental Tree |
Tilia × europaea as Ornamental Plant |
Tilia × europaea – Lime – Linden |
Tilia × europaea – Lime – Linden |
Tilia × europaea – Lime – Linden |
2 comments:
Never park your car under a Lime tree because they drip some kind of corrosive goo!
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