Separate names with a comma.
thanks Michael...
thanks everyone for your input and help IDing all my trees spottings. I'm learning heaps, but sl.o.o.o.w.ly!
fantastic, thanks...
Might not be enough here for an ID of this tree seen in the Yosemite National Park.
Re: Tree 18 Hmmm... thanks. Will put up a spotting of a tree trunk that may be a mature tree. Will you have a look at it? Tree 23.
How strange. been seeing a lot of odd shaped galls in australia also.
Re: tree 21 Wow, way to go Michael! You know them all... thanks a lot.
thanks Michael. What are the fluffy things?
Re: Tree 18 Hmm, I wonder where all the mature incense-Cedar trees were. There were many young ones, but none of the mature tree spottings I took...
This was found growing in a Redwood forest beside a river in Yosemite National Park, California, between 1,500 and 2,00 meters.
Found growing in Yosemite Village, California
Manyof these trees were growing in Yosemite Village, California.
This was found growing in Yosemite National Park on a granite outcrop above 2,000 meters
Many of these young trees were found growing between redwoods in a forest beside a rive in Yosemite National Park, California, at between 1,500...
This was found growing in a Redwood forest beside a river in Yosemite Village, California, between 1,500 and 2,00 meters.
So Michael, all the pine cones that look like these, are from benthamiana? The ordinary cones that most people know as 'pine cones'? Thanks again...
Learning to recognise trees by their bark. These photos were taken in Yosemite National Park, California between 1,500 and 2,000 meters.
Learning to recognise trees by their bark. These photos were taken in Yosemite National Park. Obviously some sort of pine tree, mature cones, pine...
Re: trees thanks Michael. That's it for today, I have to go out now. More coming soon... Kind regards, Pam
A species of sequoia. Probably the largest one.