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  1. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    Ah, thank you. Getting smarter everyday.
  2. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    Having never seen a hickory before, going by the leaf I would've guessed ash. California tree dude.
  3. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    Pygmy version.
  4. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    Ah, skunk cabbage. Lysichiton americanus? I'm not familiar with the eastern variety. This is the western variety. Grows strictly in bogs and swamps. Leaves can reach over 6 feet long and 2 feet wide.
  5. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    Ok. got that straightened out.
  6. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    No kidding. It's a bean? Not your typical lily pod. By a long shot. You got me going.
  7. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    It's rhizomatus. A type of Lily? Nothing I recognize off the cuff.
  8. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    sucker growth has mulberry characters
  9. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    Who would have thought?
  10. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    Looks like a cotonwood, or poplar sort.
  11. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    Cottonwood. Straight sob.
  12. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    I'll hazard a guess on this one, as native species go in Tennessee, that could be a White Pine, Loblolly Pine, Pitch Pine, Short-leaf Pine or Table Mountain pine. Best guess from west of the Rockies.
  13. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    Could be a twinberry, Lonicera involucrata, a relative to the Honeysuckle.
  14. gf beranek

    The Tree ID Thread

    Sumac.
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