Wednesday, 6 June 2012

Choke Cherry Tree

Choke Cherry Tree Biography
The chokecherry Prunus virginiana is a large shrub or small tree, usually found growing in small clonal clusters. Typical size for fruiting bushes is one to three inches in diameter and eight to fifteen feet tall. Fruit is occasionally produced on plants only three feet high, and exceptionally large specimens may reach forty feet in height and a foot in diameter. Chokecherry bushes are completely devoid of thorns.

The bark of chokecherry is thin, dark gray or brown, and fairly smooth, showing only faint and scattered, paper-thin wavy ridges running roughly lengthwise. The bark also exhibits corky, oblong lenticels about one eighth to one fourth of an inch long. These lenticels appear as slightly raised bumps and are arranged with their longer dimension perpendicular to the trunk. Many of the lenticels bear a perpendicular split in the middle (i.e. the split runs parallel to the trunk), which reveals a light reddish-brown color underneath. It's a cumbersome explanation, but you'll easily see what I'm talking about when you look at a chokecherry tree.

Chokecherry leaves are alternate, 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 inches long, broadly ovate and abruptly acuminate. The edges are finely and sharply serrated, with the teeth usually pointed outward. The foliage is dull green above and lighter grayish green underneath. Rusty wool. The petioles are usually 3/4 to 1 1/4 inches long and bear two glands near the base of the leaf.


Choke Cherry Tree
Choke Cherry Tree
Choke Cherry Tree
Choke Cherry Tree
Choke Cherry Tree
Choke Cherry Tree
Choke Cherry Tree
Choke Cherry Tree
The Choke Cherry Tree
Planting Chokecherry Trees

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