View Full Version : Dawn Redwood
Cobleskill
04-15-2008, 09:17 AM
I saw a nice tree the other day and wan't sure what it was. The native trees I know but ornamentals I am a bit sketchty. About 3 feet in circumferenc at ground level and it tapered steadily as you went up. Really cool deep flutes in the trunk. The H.O. wasn't home so nobody to ask what it was. Yesterday looking at a tree job I saw a young tree of the same kind. I was told it was a Dawn Redwood. Probably quite common but first time for me. Anybody else like em? Good tree to plant?
treetx
04-15-2008, 09:24 AM
ahhh sweet Taxodium.
It is a very interesting tree, not discovered by round eyes until the 1940's.
i love em, weve got some big one around here. will have a couple in my arboretum when i get more land
Paul B
04-15-2008, 11:11 AM
I think its Metasequoia glyptostroboides rather than Taxodium distychum(sp?) if its dawn redwood, the Taxodium is swamp cypress here for a common name. But a rose is a rose.....
:)
good catch paul, Metasequoia glyptostroboides is the one i was refering to
treetx
04-15-2008, 01:18 PM
Sorry, I didn't want to lead anyone to think I was talking of T.distichum or T. Mucronatum. It was rather a note of the family, Taxodiaceae(which includes Metasequoia) rather than the genus. ;)
OTGBOSTON
04-15-2008, 02:11 PM
Hands down my favorite tree. Lots of big ones around here, the Arnold Arboretum (City of Boston owned, Harvard University maintained) brought the first ones to the US when they we "rediscovered" in the 1940's. I planted one in my front yard last fall. Good street tree.
Just 2 weeks ago I took one of the oldest ones in Denmark down. One of the team members on the Yangtse river expedition that discovered the Metasequoias was Danish, and he brought seeds home. He had a friend, a professor of geologi, who was given 2 of the first seedlings, one of which I cut down. A pity, really but it had grown too big for the garden in which it stood. Almost 4 feet DBH and 70 feet tall. At least The other one was left standing.
treetx
04-15-2008, 06:33 PM
I have seen them in Germany as well as Australia.
There is one here in Austin at the botanical gardens but it is only 5 yrs old. I have a nickle that says it won't do too well with our hot dry summers and very basic soils :(
THillMaine
04-15-2008, 08:54 PM
me gusta mucho...i want to climb those ones downt he street (arnold arb)
BostonBull
04-15-2008, 08:56 PM
Dawn Redwoods are Awesome trees!
One of the estates we maintain has one that is around 3'DBH.
No_Bivy
04-15-2008, 08:56 PM
I have a cool group planting Bonsai of Dawn Redwoods....nice.:D
OTGBOSTON
04-15-2008, 09:05 PM
me gusta mucho...i want to climb those ones downt he street (arnold arb)
there are some biggies in the Public Gaaden too:/: maybe no one will notice..........
BostonBull
04-15-2008, 09:16 PM
there are some biggies in the Public Gaaden too:/: maybe no one will notice..........
sniff sniff
sniff sniff
:?
I want in on whatever is going down here......:glasses2:
Paul B
04-16-2008, 12:54 AM
Sorry, I didn't want to lead anyone to think I was talking of T.distichum or T. Mucronatum. It was rather a note of the family, Taxodiaceae(which includes Metasequoia) rather than the genus. ;)
sorry Nate, not trying to bust your ball$, good save :D
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