Plums

Discussion in 'VCBF Neighbourhood Blogs' started by wcutler, Mar 7, 2008.

  1. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    This street looks great right now - pink plums on both sides of the street for two blocks along E 4th Ave, east of Rupert St.
    20080402_Plum_4thRupert_Cutler_1945.jpg

    There are mostly white plums on E 3rd Ave from Penticton going east to Kaslo, missing out only one block, and then pink plums continue from Kaslo to Windermere. This pink plum with white plum understock is on 3rd at Slocan.
    20080402_Plum_3rdSlocan_Cutler_1880.jpg
     
  2. Joseph Lin

    Joseph Lin Active Member 10 Years

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    There are still many beautiful plum in Arbutus Ridge community. The first two plum are "Negra"-leaved plum, and the other three are purple-leaved plum.
     

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  3. dt-van

    dt-van Active Member 10 Years

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    Plums E.59th Ave. between Kerr and Rupert

    The plums mentioned by Mayling March 24 are at their best April 3.
    And nearby at 3069 E. 56th at Lancaster is a double flowered plum.
     

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  4. Ric Spratley

    Ric Spratley Member

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  5. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

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    The common darker pink double purpleleaf plum is Prunus x blireiana.
     
  6. Ric Spratley

    Ric Spratley Member

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    Here's the future. A newly planted prunus cerisifera nigra in the 3700 block of West 24th - a street otherwise filled with late double cherries, still barely in bud (see third picture below). April 20, 2008
     

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    Last edited: Apr 20, 2008
  7. JenD

    JenD Active Member

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    Re: Plums - FIRST POSTING FOR 2009

    First posting in 2009

    Some plums are coming into bloom in Victoria - these trees are on the northwest corner of Quadra @ Market
    Canada 2009 BC - Victoria 002.jpg Canada 2009 BC - Victoria 003.jpg Canada 2009 BC - Victoria 004.jpg
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    Canada 2009 BC - Victoria 008.jpg
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Mar 30, 2009
  8. beespeaker

    beespeaker Member

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    Re: Mount Pleasant

    26mainshape.jpg main26.jpg mutation26main.jpg

    These trees are in bloom between Main and Sophia on 26th. The ones closer to Main street have more open blossoms than the ones near Sophia. The blossoms look like Prunus Spire, but the tree shapes are more spreading than the example shown in Douglas's book. I am experimenting with photo sizing here Wendy, so please bear with me.

    Their was a heavy rain this morning followed by intense sun, so I did catch a whiff of a beautiful scent coming off these blossoms as the floral oils heated up.
     
    Last edited: Mar 31, 2009
  9. beespeaker

    beespeaker Member

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    Re: Mount Pleasant

    cuheritagehall.jpg heritagebuds.jpg heritagehall.jpg heritagehallground.jpg

    These trees are across from Heritage Hall off Main Street. I think they are Spires. Check out the way there are stems coming directly out of the ground. How does that happen with a graft?
     
  10. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    Re: Mount Pleasant

    It's hard to tell the single white blossoms at first, but once you get it, you really get it. These are plums, and the Main and Sophia ones as well. That centre blossom photo looks sort-of like a bunch, but it's really a cluster of single stems off the branch instead of a bunch inside the same set of bracts. There are 17,000 of these things around the city - you'll get to have a good look at them. Until you just know them, you'll have to get up close and personal with them and see how the stems come off the branches. Spire cherries are usually skinny (I think I can say ugly - Douglas certainly has said that), have red calyxes, and the petals are notched. And they're not out yet, which will help for a while.
     
  11. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

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    The most important ornamental plums in Victoria are the 'Lindsayae', with their unique almond pink, single early flowers on purple shoots - but with green leaves!

    Outside of my own garden I have only seen this variety in Victoria and in Britain (Hillier Arboretum, maybe one other collection I no longer remember having it). It is also listed for the US National Arboretum. It should be propagated and introduced to Vancouver.

    "This rare, beautiful, large-growing variety is only to be seen on city boulevards, notably Richmond Avenue below Richardson, Pearl Street and Gorge Road; also recently planted on View Street. Largest is one behind the concert stage in Beacon Hill Park, 47' high and 45' wide"

    http://www.arthurleej.com/a-victoriarosetrees.html
     
  12. JenD

    JenD Active Member

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    I'll see if I can find these, Ron
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Apr 1, 2009
  13. JenD

    JenD Active Member

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    Re: Plums (in Victoria)

    Here are some plum trees in the Ross Bay Cemetery (last Sunday)
     

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  14. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

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    As long as a Victoria component is going to be included hopefully the other rare kinds of Prunus mentioned on Jacobson's web site (link, above) will be found and photographed. Probably not all specimens known to be there 20 years ago will still be present, of course.
     
  15. JenD

    JenD Active Member

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    Re: Plums (Victoria)

    Here are some more ornamental plum trees in Victoria:

    Oak Bay (alley from Oak Bay Avenue to the Library parking lot) 2009-04-05

    20090405_OakBay_Plum_Dawes_001.jpg

    Hillside Avenue (hanging over the wall of the Fifth Street Bar & Grill parking lot) 2009-04-06

    20090406_HillsideFifth_Plum_Dawes_002.jpg 20090406_HillsideFifth_Plum_Dawes_005.jpg 20090406_HillsideFifth_Plum_Dawes_006.jpg 20090406_HillsideFifth_Plum_Dawes_007.jpg 20090406_HillsideFifth_Plum_Dawes_ 003.jpg
     
    Last edited: Apr 11, 2009
  16. JenD

    JenD Active Member

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    Cook Street @ Rockland Avenue 2009-04-07

    20090407_RocklandCook_Dawes_010.jpg 20090407_RocklandCook_Dawes_009.jpg 20090407_RocklandCook_Dawes_008.jpg

    Cook Street @ Burdett Avenue 2009-04-07

    20090407_BurdettCook_Dawes_011.jpg 20090407_BurdettCook_Dawes_012.jpg 20090407_BurdettCook_Dawes_013.jpg

    the following have been identified (by experts!) as cherries and moved:

    Cook Street @ McClure Street 2009-04-07
    Trutch Street (garden of B&B) 2009-04-09
    Collinson Street @ Trutch Street 2009-04-09
     
    Last edited: Apr 12, 2009
  17. Douglas Justice

    Douglas Justice Well-Known Member UBC Botanical Garden Forums Administrator Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout Maple Society 10 Years

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    Great pictures! The last three sets are cherries, not plums.
     
  18. JenD

    JenD Active Member

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    Thanks, Douglas ... I'm more apt to think plums are cherries, usually, being very new to this. I'll delete and reload to the Victoria BC cherry neighbourhood blog.
     
  19. JenD

    JenD Active Member

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    Re: Plums - Victoria

    Photos taken 2009-04-15 on Richmond south of Richardson

    20090415_RichmondRichardson_Dawes_0277.jpg 20090415_RichmondRichardson_Dawes_0276.jpg 20090415_RichmondRichardson_Dawes_0272.jpg 20090415_RichmondRichardson_Dawes_0274.jpg
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    Crab-apples have replaced the plums mentioned by Jacobson at this location

    Prunus cerasifera 'Lindsayae' is a single-flowered pink plum with green leaves. This rare, beautiful, large-growing variety is only to be seen on city boulevards, notably Richmond Avenue below Richardson ....
     
    Last edited: Apr 16, 2009
  20. Douglas Justice

    Douglas Justice Well-Known Member UBC Botanical Garden Forums Administrator Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout Maple Society 10 Years

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    Jen,

    They look like crab apples to me. You may need to take a closer look. Cherries and plums typically have glabrous (non-hairy) leaves, except rarely on petioles (leaf stems) and on the veins on the leaf undersides. Apple and crab apple leaves are usually obviously softly hairy when they emerge. In both apple and pear the floral cup is closed (you can only see the slender, upper part of the ovary (the style) and the pollen-receptive tip (the stigma), while the entire ovary is visible in both cherry and plum. The petals are also different, in that they're more tennis racket-shaped in the apple and more egg-shaped in cherry and plum.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Apr 5, 2017
  21. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

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    Yes: definitely a crabapple. Same or similar (there are hundreds of kinds) is also blooming at the University of Washington.
     
  22. JenD

    JenD Active Member

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    Thanks for the excellent info, Douglas, and for your patience - as you can tell I am a complete newbie. I couldn't get close enough to really see, they are tall trees. It was the location given by Jacobson ... I guess those plums are gone now.

    Should I remove these pictures, so as not to confuse others?
     
    Last edited: Apr 16, 2009
  23. JenD

    JenD Active Member

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    Thanks, Ron. In that case, the trees mentioned by Jacobson are no longer at this location.
     
  24. JenD

    JenD Active Member

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    Re: Plums - Victoria

    Photos taken 2009-03-22 on View Street between Blanshard and Quadra

    20090322_View_Dawes_003.jpg 20090322_View_Dawes_004.jpg 20090322_View_Dawes_005.jpg

    20090322_View_Dawes_006.jpg 20090322_View_Dawes_007.jpg 20090322_View_Dawes_008.jpg

    20090322_View_Dawes_009.jpg Ron B has confirmed these are the "Lindsayae"

    Jacobson: Prunus cerasifera 'Lindsayae' is a single-flowered pink plum with green leaves. This rare, beautiful, large-growing variety is only to be seen on city boulevards, notably Richmond Avenue below Richardson, Pearl Street and Gorge Road; also recently planted on View Street. Largest is one behind the concert stage in Beacon Hill Park, 47' high and 45' wide.
     
    Last edited: May 4, 2009
  25. guidingcricket

    guidingcricket Member

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    Beauty on Graveley

    Do we know how lucky we are to have such beauty at our fingertips? Graveley Street had consistent beautiful trees from Renfrew to Nanaimo.
     

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