Beautiful Fragrance - What Kind of Tree is this?

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Cambium

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As I was sitting on that bench in this picture I was overwhelmed by an awesome sweet fragrance! Almost like Lemon Plant blooms.

It came from this tree dropping little flowers. Anyone know what kind of tree this is? I can look it up but figure I share it with you too.

7AhTPgdh.jpg


Flowers
4oerPWOh.jpg


Bark
ARYcV9ah.jpg


Leaves
nP3sxP6h.jpg
 
That's finest tree God gave to mankind, in my opinion. Black locust.

Strangely enough I consider black locust to be a member of the weed family. It does burn great once you deal with the nasty slimy bark but I don't care for the smell and it spreads very badly into fields if one does not mow regularly and grows from the roots. I chained on to one once and pulled up 3. Not very long lived and bad to lose tops and uproot once they reach old age at around 80 yrs.
 
As I was sitting on that bench in this picture I was overwhelmed by an awesome sweet fragrance! Almost like Lemon Plant blooms.

It came from this tree dropping little flowers. Anyone know what kind of tree this is? I can look it up but figure I share it with you too.

7AhTPgdh.jpg


Flowers
4oerPWOh.jpg


Bark
ARYcV9ah.jpg


Leaves
nP3sxP6h.jpg
Black Locust.
Hard and dense.
Great firewood and great furniture wood with lots of character.
Season it for a couple years or more and the heat it puts off is wonderful.
 
Good old locust. We have some locust fence post on the property that have been in the ground for many decades. Still so sound I doubt you could drive a nail into one. The super frigate USS Constitution used locust pegs as “treenails” to hold the ship together. I believe some are still going strong.


http://bpcr.net/documents/Miscellaneous/Restoring_Old_Ironsides.htm
 
Good old locust. We have some locust fence post on the property that have been in the ground for many decades. Still so sound I doubt you could drive a nail into one. The super frigate USS Constitution used locust pegs as “treenails” to hold the ship together. I believe some are still going strong.


http://bpcr.net/documents/Miscellaneous/Restoring_Old_Ironsides.htm

While still bada$$, black locust has nothing on lignum vitae, which due to its incredible hardness and wear resistance was used to make shaft bearings on nuclear submarines.

https://www.core77.com/posts/25224/...earings-for-nuclear-submarines-and-more-25224
 
But locust doesn’t give off a lemony smell.
I suspect there were some Yew bushes nearby.
That's what I was thinking. I had a bush growing in the yard when I lived in my previous house....old farm house with old yard. I never identified the bush but it had a strong lemon smell during the spring.
 
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