enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ah, the sounds of autumn in Tallahassee 2024: Ping, crack and ...

    www.aol.com/ah-sounds-autumn-tallahassee-2024...

    It seems that every 2-7 years, oak trees, both red and white, produce a heavy “mast” year, a bumper crop, of acorns. Ah, the sounds of autumn in Tallahassee 2024: Ping, crack and crunch Skip ...

  3. Quercus wislizeni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quercus_wislizeni

    California physician and botanist (and one of the founding fathers of the California Academy of Sciences) Albert Kellogg described an oak in an 1855 publication as Quercus arcoglandis (spur acorn oak), [10] apparently the same species as Q. wislizeni. This clearly predates French-Swiss botanist de Candolle's 1864 name, and if confirmed to be ...

  4. Live oak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_oak

    Live oak was widely used in early American butt shipbuilding.Because of the trees' short height and low-hanging branches, lumber from live oaks was used in curved parts of the frame, such as knee braces (single-piece, L-shaped braces that spring inward from the side and support the deck), in which the grain runs perpendicular to structural stress, making for exceptional strength.

  5. Quercus chrysolepis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quercus_chrysolepis

    Quercus chrysolepis, commonly termed canyon live oak, canyon oak, golden cup oak or maul oak, is a North American species of evergreen oak that is found in Mexico and in the western United States, notably in the California Coast Ranges. This tree is often found near creeks and drainage swales growing in moist cool microhabitats. Its leaves are ...

  6. Deer hunting in a bumper crop year: How to capitalize on ...

    www.aol.com/deer-hunting-bumper-crop-capitalize...

    Deer begin laying down their travel routes to and from the apple and oak trees, long before the fruit and nuts even ripen. On these good years, some trees produce heavy, branch-bending loads ...

  7. Quercus lyrata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quercus_lyrata

    Quercus lyrata, the overcup oak, is an oak in the white oak group (Quercus sect. Quercus). The common name, overcup oak, refers to its acorns that are mostly enclosed within the acorn cup. [ 3 ] It is native to lowland wetlands in the eastern and south-central United States, in all the coastal states from New Jersey to Texas , inland as far as ...

  8. Andricus quercuscalicis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andricus_quercuscalicis

    Galls (upper left and right) formed on acorns on the branch of a pedunculate (or English) oak tree by the parthenogenetic generation Andricus quercuscalicis.. The large 2 cm gall growth appears as a mass of green to yellowish-green, ridged, and at first sticky plant tissue on the bud of the oak, that breaks out as the gall between the cup and the acorn.

  9. Acorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acorn

    Many animals eat unripe acorns on the tree or ripe acorns from the ground, with no reproductive benefit to the oak, but some animals, such as squirrels and jays serve as seed dispersal agents. Jays and squirrels that scatter-hoard acorns in caches for future use effectively plant acorns in a variety of locations in which it is possible for them ...