Ginkgo biloba

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Elmore

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Feb 27, 2004
Messages
2,291
Reaction score
132
Location
North Alabama
Ginkgo biloba 'ChiChi'
LinkPhoto

My first 'ChiChi', grafted in the summer of 2000. Photo made 10-9-02.
ChiChi_10-9-02.jpg

and the same tree, photo made 7-1-04.
<img src="http://hosting.picgoo.com/uploads7/chichi_7104_copy3.jpg">
and a new graft
LinkPhoto
 
Last edited:
A local male tree

I call this locally found male Ginkgo "Penny Lane". Great looking, low branched specimen. Here are pictures of it progressing through the seasons.
LinkPhoto
LinkPhoto
LinkPhoto
LinkPhoto
 
Bulldog

Here is an old, compact, male Ginkgo on a local campus. It has got to be at least 50 to 60 years old. There are some big females nearby that dwarf it. I have not grafted it yet although I have some wood in the cooler but I plan on doing some sooner or later. Bulldog is a good name for it as it is short and muscular in apperance.
LinkPhoto
LinkPhoto
 
we only see one kind of GINKO planted overhere and its usualy tall and skinny..and never makes fruit
 
Only one kind?

Originally posted by ROLLACOSTA
we only see one kind of GINKO planted overhere and its usualy tall and skinny..and never makes fruit
There likely are some unusual forms in private collections and in botanical gardens. Don't you think?
 
to be honest iv'e never given them much consideration untill now ..now i'll be on the look out for them..the seeds are used in chinese medicine and in chinese cooking..the ones in your pics look realy nice
 
Ginkgoes

The mature trees are not mine. I do have small ones of all of those except the local male tree that I called Bulldog and I can have those coming on within a year, easy. It's just a matter of doing it.
 
Last edited:
Thelma

Here is one of my latest takers 'Thelma's Broom', grafted several weeks back.

LinkPhoto
 
Country Club

Here is another male tree, found locally, that I have been doing some grafting of. It is a relatively narrow grower with two trunks. I call it Country Club.
LinkPhoto
LinkPhoto
LinkPhoto
 
'Chase Manhattan'

Here is a 'Chase Manhattan' that I obtained a few years ago and pictures of some that I budded last fall and are emerging. This dwarf cultivar is noted for it's small leaf and slow growth rate. It reaches about 15'.
LinkPhoto
LinkPhoto
LinkPhoto
 
Last edited:
'Magyar'

Here is a budded 'Magyar' with the leaves emerging. This is a good cultivar to use as it is male and upright. Sounds just like what the ladies would like.
LinkPhoto
 
'Sentry'

Here is a cultivar, 'Sentry'. I got the wood from a botanical garden down here in the South several years ago. It has a large, glossy dark green leaf, wider than deep. Compared to my 'Autumn Gold' it holds it's leaves longer and maintains a good buttery yellow fall color far longer. It is a fastigiate form but the mother plant was in a lot of shade and if I recall correctly it was not very narrow or columnar in habit. I really like this one.
LinkPhoto
 
'Fastigiata'

Here is another fastigiate cultivar, 'Fastigiata'
LinkPhoto
 
Last edited:
'Tubiformis'

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Here is a cultivar that I obtained as a small 1g plant from a nurseryman in Crestwood, KY. I received it in about 2001 when it was about 6-10" tall. I immediately bumped it up to a 7g container. It is now about 6' tall and staked. 'Tubiformis' is characterized by leaves that are rolled up like a tube or a trumpet. Some leaves appear as if two separate, opposing leaves. As this cultivar matures it is said to produce more typically shaped leaves that are somewhat lanciniate. I have noticed new leaves that show this lanciniate form. Also pictured is a closeup of some leaves from this plant and two pictures of a second 'Tubiformis' that I grafted in 2002 or there abouts. It is the first and only 'Tubiformis' that I have yet grafted. Both of these plants have now produced enough growth that I will soon be grafting/budding as many as one or two dozen additional plants. The two pictures of the smaller 'Tubiformis' show the vigorous growth put on between April 2004 and July 2004.
Tubiformis_7-6-04.jpg


LinkPhoto


LinkPhoto
 
Last edited:
yes ive seen the ones at kew ,but in general they are a fairly rare tree in the UK..i read that they are a good tree for polluted areas [good street tree]...

hope fully either late this year or early next i might start to dabble in growing trees though i'd do it small scale at first i can see some major investmant in growing trees
 
Originally posted by ROLLACOSTA
we only see one kind of GINKO planted overhere and its usualy tall and skinny..and never makes fruit

Be thankful. The stench of a female ginko is'nt my favorite smell.:Monkey:
 
bank

waiting at the atm at the bank, turned round and there was one, looked further and the street was littered with ginko standards....never seen one, then wham 8

jamie
 

Latest posts

Back
Top