Showing posts with label Cherry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cherry. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Prunus serrulata - Japanese Cherry - Cherry Blossom


General Information
Common Name Japanese Cherry
Scientific Name Prunus serrulata
Sun Tolerance Full Sun
Height 8-12 m (26 - 40 ft)
Spread 8-12 m (26-40 ft)
Growth Rate Fast
Bloom Time Spring
Color Green, Red
Flower Color Pink
Type Tree
Native Europe, USA, Asia
Classification
Kingdom Plantae – Plants
Subkingdom Tracheobionta – Vascular plants
SuperdivisionSpermatophyta – Seed plants
Division Magnoliophyta – Flowering plants
Class Magnoliopsida – Dicotyledons
Subclass Rosidae
Order/ Rosales
Family Rosaceae – Rose family
Genus Prunus L. – cherry
Species P. serrulata


Prunus serrulata - Japanese Cherry
Prunus serrulata common name is Japanese Cherry also called Hill Cherry, or Oriental Cherry or East Asian Cherry. It is a species of cherry native to Easter Asia  as Japan, Korea and China.  It is used for its spring cherry blossom displays and festivals.
It is a small deciduous tree with a short single trunk, with a dense crown.  It grows 8–12 m (26–40 ft). The smooth bark is chestnut-brown, with prominent horizontal lenticels. The leaves are arranged alternately, simple, ovate-lanceolate. Every leaf is 5–13 cm long and 2.5–6.5 cm broad, with a short petiole and a serrate or doubly serrate margin. At the end of autumn, the green leaves turn yellow or red. 
The flower of the P. serrulata is the main attraction. When bloom they are looking so beautiful. It blooms pink flowers in spring. The flowers are produced in racemose clusters of two to five together at nodes on short spurs in spring at the same time as the new leaves appear; with five petals in the wild type tree. The people of Japan, Korea and China celebrate the Cherry Blossom Festival when they full blooms in Spring. The fruit is a globose black drupe 8–10 mm diameter. Prunus serrulata is widely grown as a flowering ornamental tree, both in its native countries and throughout the temperate regions of the world. In cultivation in Europe and North America, it is usually grafted on to Prunus avium roots; the cultivated forms rarely bear fruit. It is viewed as part of the Japanese custom of Hanami.
The National Cherry Blossom Festival is a spring celebration in Washington, D.C., commemorating the 1912 gift of Prunus serrulata Japanese cherry trees from Tokyo to the city of Washington. They are planted in the Tidal Basin park. P. serrulata is manly cultivates as a flowering tree. People plant it in their garden or in the Park as ornamental Tree


Japanese Cherry

Japanese Cherry Leaves

Leaves of Cherry Blossom

Japanese Cherry Flowers

Flowers of Cherry Blossom

Japanese Cherry Fruits

Fruits of Japanese Cherry

Japanese Cherry Bark

Japanese Cherry Bark

Japanese Cherry leaves in Fall

Cherry Blossom as Ornamental Plant

Japanese Cherry

Japanese Cherry in tub

Japanese Cherry as ornamental tree

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Prunus padus - Bird Cherry


General Information
Common Name Bird Cherry
Scientific Name Prunus padus
Sun Tolerance Full Sun
Height 6-9 m (20 - 30 ft)
Spread 4.5 -6 m (15 - 20 ft)
Growth Rate Fast
Bloom Time Early Summer
Color Green
Flower Color White
Type Tree
Native Europe, USA
Classification
Kingdom Plantae – Plants
Subkingdom Tracheobionta – Vascular plants
SuperdivisionSpermatophyta – Seed plants
Division Magnoliophyta – Flowering plants
Class Magnoliopsida – Dicotyledons
Subclass Rosidae
Order/ Rosales
Family Rosaceae – Rose family
Genus Prunus L. – cherry
Species P. padus


Prunus padus - Bird Cherry
Prunus padus common name is Bird Cherry. This is a small slender cherry tree, sometime only a bush is particularly at home along stream sides in the Scottish Highlands. But it is mainly native to northern Europe and northern Asia. The crown is rounded, The upper branches ascending steeply, the lower spreading and even dropping.
The winter buds are stout, shiny, sharply pointed, and often bent, their scales vary in color from yellow to dark brown. The young shoots turn olive-green and eventually dark brown. The 2-3 inch long leaves are elliptical with finely toothed margins and are dull green on top and pale green below.
Prunus padus - Bird Cherry
There are up to forty small, white, bi-sexual, self-fertile flowers, which open in May, in each drooping or spreading spike-like raceme. The fruit (a cherry) changes from green to black, is shiny, up to half an inch in diameter and harsh and bitter to the tested, it ripens in August, and is relished by birds.
The bark is dark brown, and remains smooth, but is not shiny. The bands of orange-colored lenticels are much shorter than those on Gean (P. avium). The bark peels, and like the sappy wood has an unpleasant smell of bitter almonds. The sapwood is white and the heartwood dark purplish-brown.
Bird Cherry seems to spread more by suckering than from seed, though seedlings are extremely hardy and easily raised. It has produced several varieties and distinct geographical forms but as found growing wild in Europe does not vary greatly.




Bird Cherry Full Blooms

Prunus padus - Bird Cherry : Young Plant

Leaf of Bird Cherry

Prunus padus - Bird Cherry : Leaves

Flowers of Bird Cherry

Prunus padus - Bird Cherry Flowers

Prunus padus Flowers

Fruits of  Bird Cherry

Prunus padus Fruits

 Bird Cherry Bark

Logs of  Bird Cherry

Prunus padus - Bird Cherry

Prunus padus - Bird Cherry


Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Prunus avium - Wild Cherry - Gean


General Information
Common Name Wild Cherry, Sweet Cherry, Gean
Scientific Name Prunus avium
Sun Tolerance Full Sun
Height 6-9 m (20 - 30 ft)
Spread 4.5 -6 m (15 - 20 ft)
Growth Rate Fast
Bloom Time Early Summer
Color Green
Flower Color White
Type Tree
Native Europe, USA
Classification
Kingdom Plantae – Plants
Subkingdom Tracheobionta – Vascular plants
SuperdivisionSpermatophyta – Seed plants
Division Magnoliophyta – Flowering plants
Class Magnoliopsida – Dicotyledons
Subclass Rosidae
Order/ Rosales
Family Rosaceae – Rose family
Genus Prunus L. – cherry
Species P. avium

Prunus avium - Wild Cherry
Prunus avium common name is Wild Cherry also known as Sweet Cherry or Gean. It is to be found sparingly in mixed woodlands as a moderate-sized tree, or occasionally as a tall tree of open habit, the lower branches spreading but the remainder ascending steeply.
The twigs are greyish-brown, and the winter buds are alternate, brown, and pointed on short spur shoots. The pale green, 2 – 3 inch long elliptical leaves, which droop somewhat on fairly long stalks, have finely toothed margins and are without hairs on the upper surface, but downy below. They turn brilliant crimson in autumn. 
The white, sweetly scented, bi-sexual, self-sterile flowers, with long, slender stalks, are cup-shaped and borne in clusters (umbels) of from two to six in April-May.
The fruit (a cherry) is small and shiny, changing from green through bright red to purple when ripe in July, the taste is sweet or bitter, never acid.
The bark is grey or reddish-brown, smooth and shiny, ringed with orange-colored lenticels, and peels horizontally in thin strips. In older trees the lower bark becomes rough and furrowed. The attractive wood is golden or even greenish-brown, rather heavy, tough and hard. It is a good furniture timber, and is prized as a turnery wood for such items as bowls.
Foresters value Gen as an amenity tree, particularly on the edges of plantations. It suckers freely and it coppices when cut.


Wild Cherry Full Tree
Young Plant of Wild Cherry


Prunus avium - Wild Cherry : Leaves

Prunus avium Leaves

Wild Cherry Flowers

Sweet Cherry Flowers

Prunus avium Flowers

Prunus avium - Wild Cherry Flowers

Wild Cherry Green Fruits

Sweet Cherry Fruits

Wild Cherry Fruits

Prunus avium Fruits

Prunus avium Bark

Prunus avium Log

Beauties of Prunus avium - Wild Cherry